Liquid lam with a roller? We are going to be doing at least 70-80 if we get the job. Thanks.
find a vendor that is set up to do the work.
Id be willing to bet there are some MM here that can do that size and have Lamination.
More over why is lamination needed for these banners?
find a vendor that is set up to do the work.
Id be willing to bet there are some MM here that can do that size and have Lamination.
More over why is lamination needed for these banners?
so these guys offer 2 year warranties on their equipment but are more expensive: http://www.sign-in-china.com/produc...ng_machine_html&attr_id=1088_Liquid LaminatorThat seems really reasonable. Are they reliable? Which brand do you recommend?
so these guys offer 2 year warranties on their equipment but are more expensive: http://www.sign-in-china.com/produc...ng_machine_html&attr_id=1088_Liquid Laminator
you can find these same machines on alibaba for half the price. There is a company in AZ that has a smaller 83" and swears by them.
Liquid lam with a roller? We are going to be doing at least 70-80 if we get the job. Thanks.
You mean a quantity of 70 to 80 banners and they're all 10' x 40'... and you're thinking about rolling them with a paint roller?
Hell no, you will be shooting yourself in the foot man. Way too much wasted time and you will end up getting trash & splotches
in the finish.
Find someone local that will run them through their liquid laminator on the cheap.
If you were closer I would let you run it through our liquid laminator for next to nothing.
I'm curious as to why they would need to be laminated at all? They're banners. I'm sure there's a good reason that I'm just not aware of so that's why I'm asking.
Good luck with that. You can use Clearshield antigraffiti but trying to clean banners that are on a truck will be a PITA.they are going in frames on the sides of trucks and they want 'anti-graffiti'
You don't laminate banners.... But if you must, it needs to be liquid.
Worst statement ever.
I have been film laminating banners for 4 years. In fact there is one banner we laminated 4 years ago that has been through numerous duststorms with gusts up to 60mph that is still perfect.
Total waste of money and time. It's an age old fact that you don't laminate a banner. For one they aren't smooth and it won't lay down properly. Second I put up a for sale banner on the side of a building in 2006 and its still there today and still readable from a long distance. Beat that
Total waste of money and time. It's an age old fact that you don't laminate a banner. For one they aren't smooth and it won't lay down properly. Second I put up a for sale banner on the side of a building in 2006 and its still there today and still readable from a long distance. Beat that
Ah, an 'age old fact'. That settles it then, eh? How could anyone argue with that?
Every banner that leaves this shop gets coated with Clear Shield. Every one. Not only does it bring out the colors, it provides abrasion resistance sufficient to see it through being hemmed, grommeted, rolled up, and slid into a tube without sustaining the odd scratch or two.
In apparent contradiction of that age old fact.
Second I put up a for sale banner on the side of a building in 2006 and its still there today and still readable from a long distance. Beat that