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if you dont have any leaking lines i would look at your cables and see if one of them looks a little worn. could be losing signal to the one print head.
one thing you might want to adjust, use the plastic roll holders that comes with your rolls. and place them on the floor. its always a good idea to keep your material up off the floor.
on the pull down select tcp/ip.
input the correct ip addy and port number should be fine. if not it will be listed on the machine control panel under settings somewhere.
i would look at the heater.
one other area could be the material itself.
i had a few rolls that wasnt stored properly and they had a "dead" spot.
and ink never laid down right along that line and it repeated. look at the material before its printed. if you see a line in it then that could be...
i normally handle the smaller simple stuff myself.
i am more than capable to handle any level of repair. i just choose to spend my time on more productive things.
but like i said i would rather do the quick easy to fix stuff and keep running than wait on a tech
i also live in a constant state of static shocks.
i also just walk around touching metal to discharge myself all the time now out of habit.
nothing i can do about the environment. or the material. so its easy to just live with it
looks like a simple fence post and wood slats with the substrate pinched between them.
i havent seen a "kit" like that. maybe someone else has. but my guess is it was a quick custom build. looks rather easy to put together.
as a user of the hp 360.
i love my machine. it is a work horse and keeps on running.
i have printed on lots of different materials and get great results every time.
i was using a mutoh when i got my new hp and haven't touched the mutoh since.
just had a tech in to do a service maintenance tuneup...
i dont think it will help much. the ink covers a surface area. when stretched that surface area increases but the ink doesn't.
the ink wont stretch and thin out like the vinyl does. it just covers less of the surface area.
if that makes sense. i haven't tried it. so if you want i would suggest...
i am glad it works for you.
i have never had any come off that was freshly stuck.
i have had it come off from being damp.
i have had it come off after water gets in behind it.
getting the water out takes more time and effort than just sticking it and moving on.
but hey if it works for you great.
i have never had an issue with my vinyl not adhering fast enough. once its down its down.
i can install a lot faster if i dont have to worry about fluid.
now you wanted an explanation about the difference between water and air.
this is rather simple. a water is much larger than air is. and...
if you can produce a few samples in your design software. thats what i would do. if your talking about adjustments on the rip. dont do that. needs to be something that can easily be recreated with out having to remember what adjustments was made on the rip.
always keep it simple. to many choices...
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