Actually it is on the Right side of the car.
Furthermore you will find that more countries in the world drive with the steering wheel on the right side of the car as opposed to the left.
By all means, everyone wrap starting in the middle.
The only reason why Ginos guy he talked to was starting in the middle is because he obviously had no training, and he taught himself.
No offense, but if you're that good at jumping to conclusions about a guy you don't even know, It makes me wonder if you jump to similar conclusions about the process other people use to do a job, just because it's different from yours.
Joe, not calling anyone stupid. You can get hung up on the fact that i called someone none of us know an idiot, no problem - don't care.
Here's my point.
You're putting letters on cars, i'm wrapping them. Much different. They're not the same. I'm not talking about lettering a smart car, or putting a stripe on a police care. I'm talking about wraps. I'm not comparing your letters to a wrap. I have no idea why you think it's the same. It's not only my "experience." Not that i care for 3m or any of their guide lines, but on the test to get certified if you circled the wrap from middle to sides you will fail. MY point, why risk doing it a way that could cause a premature failure.
And again, I'm not talking about lettering on a smart car. I know I've said that once. I'm not sure why a wrap and a super graphic on a semi would be any different in this case. Like I said we do a lot of those trucks, It's our bread an butter here and I can assure you they have just as much exposed edge area as a lot of wraps out there. We have also done wraps, most have been partial wraps, again a lot of surface edge. None of these have been damaged by wind. MY point is I question how much of a risk it is, if it is even a risk at all. I wonder if the choice of what paper towels we use to wipe the cleaning fluid off is more risky.
And on a side note: I wish that if someone failed the wrap test by missing that one question, they would have a "basic design principals" portion of that test. I'm not saying all wraps are poorly designed. but there sure seems to be an abundance of them out there. And what does it matter which way you install your panels if the graphics on your panels aren't effective at all?
This video is really short but you can clearly see the edges lifting due to the wind:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbIyoO1_gDo
wayne k
guam usa
There is no way the wind would get into the air channels when the vehicle is driving, that is just ridiculous. It its not the space shuttle
Here is one simple solution. Why doesnt the installer take the total width of the printed panels which I'm guessing would be 52"ish and add all 13 panels up and figure his bleed?
ie: trailer is 636"/53'
13 printed panels @ 50" = 650"
That way he can start in the rear and work forward.
for those who think wind damage doesn't hurt.
We did this back in Oct. 1 week later this happened. My guess is that my installer who did the hood, didn't tuck it into the grill all the way in that area. This is the result. I'm trying to save everyone the hassle of doing something twice.
Looking at this I would think improper care, automatic car washes, etc help aggravate this problem.
As far as side surface of a trailer, air speed is very minimal close to the surface. Watch the fly stick to your side window when your going 80 mph down the freeway. How come this nasty wind does not blow every magnet on every car off if it rips the leading edge of vinyl off?