Which ones/brands?Another possibility is a new or used hydraulic cutter. The school has two in the lab, they're beasts.
When I'm on campus again I'll get the name. You'd think with all the time spent running them I'd know that..Which ones/brands?
I was looking at something called "500v9" there's many brands etc of this. but i cannot find anyone using one or talking about them.
Electric, hydraulic. either one. i think "electric paper cutters" are what they're called in the print world. i could be wrong.
thanks, that would be great!When I'm on campus again I'll get the name. You'd think with all the time spent running them I'd know that..
Here ya go! Campus is on break so I didn't want to fire up anything. All touch screen and double prox switches to activate blade. Foot operated hold down to see where the blade will drop. Also shows shadow lines like some miter saws. Handy if you don't feel like punching in numbers. Gets plenty close.thanks, that would be great!
Oh yes i was looking at something similar but chinese.Here ya go! Campus is on break so I didn't want to fire up anything. All touch screen and double prox switches to activate blade. Foot operated hold down to see where the blade will drop. Also shows shadow lines like some miter saws. Handy if you don't feel like punching in numbers. Gets plenty close.
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Looks like it will work. Nothing like that satisfying zip sound as it cuts a stack.Oh yes i was looking at something similar but chinese.
That's helpful!We bought a really inexpensive one off of Amazon a while back. Just for testing a project. We had to mess with it a bit to get it accurate, but it worked fairly well. I think ours is 17" (430mm) wide.
Nice, let us know how it works out.I ended up getting an IDEAL ideal 4850 with in budget.
That will be the perfect machine to get started. I can't remember if that one has the hand crank to tighten the back blade or not? But it will work. I did find with our old cutter that the hand crank was sometimes difficult to manage accurate cuts with tall stacks of glossy paper or sticker material. We've upgraded to a hydraulic cutter and its much better but this does come at a cost of course. Good luck!I ended up getting an IDEAL ideal 4850 with in budget.
this is the one with the electric clamp and blade. just a manual backplate. basically good enough for most jobs. For what i paid for it, it wouldn't pay for a new mechanical one..So im wrapped!That will be the perfect machine to get started. I can't remember if that one has the hand crank to tighten the back blade or not? But it will work. I did find with our old cutter that the hand crank was sometimes difficult to manage accurate cuts with tall stacks of glossy paper or sticker material. We've upgraded to a hydraulic cutter and its much better but this does come at a cost of course. Good luck!
Being German, i think it'll be great!.Nice, let us know how it works out.
That cutter will last you another 20 yearsBeing German, i think it'll be great!.
We gave it a quick service, oil and grease etc. very basic internals.
i've ran a few jobs on it, no issues. I'll probably get the spare blade sharpened and use it for a few years or so.