I guess, we have to attach a circular blade on the take-up pro system. But I am not sure how that will work as both the trimmed media and the printed media has to be rolled up so that it does not loose strength needed for the blade to work.pushing media through a blade just sounds like a recipe for buckling.
sounds like a job for a blade-collar on the takeup core? like a circularsaw-style collar full of Xacto blades that cuts as it winds?
Any pointers for the slitting system. I searched on web but they are a separate system like xy cuttersMany printers have slitters. You can 3D print a holder for a blade and attach it as you wish. But you must collect it on the take-up otherwise it's not going to work.
Any pointers for the slitting system. I searched on web but they are a separate system like xy cutters
Can you suggest me any automated system that can hang employees every day and unhang them when the work is done.We hang two light employees with cacti knives and they cut material as it feeds. They are only good for an hour because the blood rushes to their heads.
Just above you I show two different systemsthere is no inline slitters for any printer that I am aware of. Fotobo has an xy cutter but if you do anything rigid or plan on cutting anything rigid you should just get a router that is belt driven.
you could try shaking them once in a whileWe hang two light employees with cacti knives and they cut material as it feeds. They are only good for an hour because the blood rushes to their heads.
Thanks for the image and video. I finally get an idea on how to mount it. I now need blade holder and mounting system. HP latex in-line slitter is a costly affair, I am hopeful some customizable solution may achieve this with low cost.Just above you I show two different systems
One Mimaki, one HP.
Also some laminator manufacturers make very simple systems. Just extruded aluminium, blade holder with blades pushing down. Channel under the material so blade will push through.