rapidwraps01
New Member
WARNING TO PRINT SHOPS – DO NOT BUY A ROLAND PRINTER
My experience has cost me thousands. Here’s what happened.
My name is Caleb Wilson, and I own a successful wrap shop in Southern California, Rapid Wraps. About a year ago, I purchased a Roland VG3-640 through Montroy Sign Supply. I was originally going to buy an Epson, but was convinced that the Roland VG was the top choice—especially for vibrant greens, which I would use commonly for a great customer of ours, Monster Energy.
Big mistake.
By the third wrap printed, I was already dealing with severe banding issues. Montroy's techs came out and temporarily fixed it, but the issue kept coming back. Then came the color inconsistencies, unreliable output, and the absolute nightmare that is VersaWorks, which takes 4–5x longer to RIP files compared to Onyx. For wrap shops that deal with multi-panel files, this completely kills productivity.
Montroy has been helpful, but Roland’s support has been horrendous. No urgency, no accountability, and no real fixes. After wasting thousands in materials and hours of labor, I stopped using the printer altogether and went back to my HP 560 latex machines, which have been rock solid.
Montroy eventually offered to swap the printer for the “Newest and Geatest” TrueVIS XP-640, a generous offer where they ate a $5K difference. I only paid for the new inks. I agreed to try again.
Same exact issues.
I told Montroy I was done—they agreed to notify Roland and attempt a refund. Roland then sent out another tech who made more promises:
I’m officially done.
Roland has been the worst company I’ve dealt with in 10+ years of business. They sold me a machine that underperforms, overpromises, and burns through materials and time with no support. I am posting this and have a brand new machine that is sitting here not being used because of all the issues they can't fix.
My experience has cost me thousands. Here’s what happened.
My name is Caleb Wilson, and I own a successful wrap shop in Southern California, Rapid Wraps. About a year ago, I purchased a Roland VG3-640 through Montroy Sign Supply. I was originally going to buy an Epson, but was convinced that the Roland VG was the top choice—especially for vibrant greens, which I would use commonly for a great customer of ours, Monster Energy.
Big mistake.
By the third wrap printed, I was already dealing with severe banding issues. Montroy's techs came out and temporarily fixed it, but the issue kept coming back. Then came the color inconsistencies, unreliable output, and the absolute nightmare that is VersaWorks, which takes 4–5x longer to RIP files compared to Onyx. For wrap shops that deal with multi-panel files, this completely kills productivity.
Montroy has been helpful, but Roland’s support has been horrendous. No urgency, no accountability, and no real fixes. After wasting thousands in materials and hours of labor, I stopped using the printer altogether and went back to my HP 560 latex machines, which have been rock solid.
Montroy eventually offered to swap the printer for the “Newest and Geatest” TrueVIS XP-640, a generous offer where they ate a $5K difference. I only paid for the new inks. I agreed to try again.
Same exact issues.
- Constant banding
- Even worse color inconsistency
- Nothing stayed calibrated
- Again, weeks of downtime, reprints, and lost trust with clients
I told Montroy I was done—they agreed to notify Roland and attempt a refund. Roland then sent out another tech who made more promises:
- New Onyx profiles to fix rip time issues
- A free external dryer because the prints weren't curing
- A free set of inks
I’m officially done.
Roland has been the worst company I’ve dealt with in 10+ years of business. They sold me a machine that underperforms, overpromises, and burns through materials and time with no support. I am posting this and have a brand new machine that is sitting here not being used because of all the issues they can't fix.
DO NOT BUY A ROLAND
- Terrible color reliability
- Unfixable banding
- Miserable RIP workflow
- Horrible tech support
- Empty promises