Yes, you can,,
but how many times do you ahve to try to get it right? How many times can you get an accurate cut which is very important for layered vinyl?
And how many feet of cuttings can you get and have it stay on track? And how much babysitting do u have to do to make sure the cutter doesn't screw up the job?
And how much vinyl is wasted redoing mistakes?
And then, finally, how muh time is lost (when it does screw up) hunting down some fix or workaround that no one knows about because fo some non standard technique or firmware requirement.???
Until I learned a few tricks; A few times. Since? None.
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gotta love /ignore
Wait... You can ignore? Sweet! *adds as well*
Very odd my 'packet size' is grey out, when checked it only lets me go between 1kb - 16kb, it won't accept 1000kb?
You might be doing what I was doing at first; I was staring at 'Transmission' buffer, not packet size.
Packet size is greyed out by default; It's not a dropdown in 7.0, but it is a user-editable with an up/down button set on the right.
Grab a phillips screwdriver and go to the back of your machine where the rollers slide into, if you have ever watched this area (or listened) you would notice small sparks caused from the bearings sitting on the plastic with no way to ground so it builds up and arcs to the phillips screw. Ever notice roland has metal supports for their rollers? Anyway loosen one screw per side and bring the screw up to where it will contact the roller bearings and this will provide an easy ground for the rollers to discharge all that static.
I haven't opened mine again recently, but instead of moving screws/etc, wouldn't it make more sense just to make yourself a static ground cable from that screw to the case itself? I might try this, as an added level of protection.
#5 If you have a humidifier or swamp cooler(for the summer) USE them to raise the humidity to help discharge the static created. (helpful, but not required.)
The only issue with maintaining a higher humidity, is that while this will naturally help with static, it can also be an issue; As since the position of the board and the static-producers are so close, I wonder if this could also trigger an issue. My guess why more humidity would be better is that while the static discharge may still occur, it happens more frequently and less intense by quite a bit, thus not causing the hardware not to goof up. As mentioned above; Would static grounds from the screws be a better solution?
Edit/Add: I can't find whom commented on it quickly, but just to add; I've gotten well over 30 feet in one run with perfect tracking. My secret on the Master (Which I know you negative people will comment on) is that if I do need perfect tracking, I simply feed the vinyl off the roll so that there is no jarring issues. From my watching of the unit, it is the number one place for issues. Especially on larger rolls, it is just too much material/weight for 2 pinch rollers. It slips, plain and simple. I'm not sure who told me or mentioned it, but I heard a way to really make this easy, is to find 1 or 2 more pinch rollers, add them to the track for that extra grippage.