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Doming brushed chrome is a study in frustration. Something with the material. IIRC I made well over a dozen pieces to get six that were perfect.
Laminate will still scratch. Just take longer to look like foo. I've done a couple where I remove the wiper and cover the hole with a gasketed seal.(or just unplug the wiper motor) Removing the whole ***'y makes for a clean, easy install.
Just internet here. Stopped paying to watch commercials and reruns years ago. Wife and I watch Perry Mason or Thriller Theater sometimes.
Thinking about a Roku, but not entirely sold on the concept. Doubt they'd have Australian V8 Supercar racing anyway. I also watch live streaming drag...
We print/cut on the brushed and sometimes chrome. Looks great and holds up well.(fishing lures) We even print on the stuff that isn't ink receptive.(holographic) For its intended purpose it works fine.
IIRC you can get the swatch from Roland's website. It is called CutContour. Although I haven't played with different colors I believe it is just a naming convention. The color they use is 100% magenta. I'd bet as long as you have the color named as CutContour anything will probably work.
I agree with Colorado regarding the new Rolands. Ain't what they used to be. Our old SP540V is a tank. IIRC the rig weighs well over 400 pounds. My wife could carry it's replacement. This is one case where weight translates into quality.
Save for a couple problems in the last 7 years it...
Depends on your business model or niche. If you do a lot of vector graphics, and layouts use Illustrator. Lots of photo manipulation and fine art repro get Photoshop.
My personal favorite is Illustrator. Use it everyday and knock out 99.9% of our work. Also use Flexi and Xara as needed...
Speesterbeast what about an SP540V? Not fast but they will pound out the work.(we've printed 21 hours straight then 17 the next day) Then keep your SP300V. Should be able to swap parts if the need arises.
We've had some issues with our through the years, but nothing horrible.
Biggest issue...
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