We do the same but always horizontal since when big areas of blacks (or much ink in general) gets like blandiblup lol we have like 10 big stacks (like 130cm table legs) in a wall for just unrolling them there (up to 4 meters). For complete rolls we have a big horizontal roll holder.If it's spooled up on the take-up reel, I take it off, loosen the roll a bit and then stand it up on end. We have some ultraboard standees from past projects that work great for this. if it's a little job, not big enough to spool up, I'll lay it on a table or drape it over a machine to sit.
We usually let our prints gas-out for a day.
What material is that? Looks almost like collapsed air channels/trapped air in IJ180c V3. Definitely, with full coverage and heavy ink, prints need time to cure before lam and installation. We do eco-sol full-bleed dark purple panels on IJ that will stretch out of shape just coming off the backer if they didn't cure first (even with laminate).People always say don't worry about it and needing to offgas is a myth.... Despite the printer manufacturers telling you to offgas themselves. One of latexs biggest selling points is instant lamination.... If you could do that with solvents, you can sure bet one manufacturer would come out and use that as a selling point.
Well, it finally happened where I could get a photo! We did 26 store front windows and 2 doors. Everyrhungnoffgassed overnight, but the artists setup the doors wrong.... So we reprinted, waiting an hour or two, laminated and then threw it up. 2 days later..... Out of 28 prints, guess which 2 were the only 2 that bubbled like this?!
I installed all of them - it was going overtop of another vinyl install.... They were all cleaned and adhered fine. Same material, same roll, only difference was one offgassed for an hour and the rest over night. I suppose it could be a hell of a coincidence that both that didnt offgas ended up bubbling.... But why risk it when you don't have to? Heavy ink deposit, so 1 hour offgassing wasn't enough.... It was dry to the touch though!
Read your printers specs. I believe the epsons are 6 hours offgassing.... It probably needs half that, but they do 6 to be on the safe side. We try for overnight.... I think waiting 48 hours is overkill.
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Don't listen to him, he's not a real sign guy.Don't worry about it.
I'm pretty sure that's just a bad (wet?) installationPeople always say don't worry about it and needing to offgas is a myth.... Despite the printer manufacturers telling you to offgas themselves. One of latexs biggest selling points is instant lamination.... If you could do that with solvents, you can sure bet one manufacturer would come out and use that as a selling point.
Well, it finally happened where I could get a photo! We did 26 store front windows and 2 doors. Everyrhungnoffgassed overnight, but the artists setup the doors wrong.... So we reprinted, waiting an hour or two, laminated and then threw it up. 2 days later..... Out of 28 prints, guess which 2 were the only 2 that bubbled like this?!
I installed all of them - it was going overtop of another vinyl install.... They were all cleaned and adhered fine. Same material, same roll, only difference was one offgassed for an hour and the rest over night. I suppose it could be a hell of a coincidence that both that didnt offgas ended up bubbling.... But why risk it when you don't have to? Heavy ink deposit, so 1 hour offgassing wasn't enough.... It was dry to the touch though!
Read your printers specs. I believe the epsons are 6 hours offgassing.... It probably needs half that, but they do 6 to be on the safe side. We try for overnight.... I think waiting 48 hours is overkill.
View attachment 162646
Nope, we only wet install frosted.I'm pretty sure that's just a bad (wet?) installation
Drytac polar, an air egress high tac vinyl.What material is that? Looks almost like collapsed air channels/trapped air in IJ180c V3. Definitely, with full coverage and heavy ink, prints need time to cure before lam and installation. We do eco-sol full-bleed dark purple panels on IJ that will stretch out of shape just coming off the backer if they didn't cure first (even with laminate).
Yet he's the only one that got it right. If a print can pass the fingertip glide test, the solvent has pretty much evaporated. This shouldn't take more than a few minutes. However the chemical changes in the media fomented by the ink coating most like have not stabilized. That can take more time than you have, just laminate it and try not to blame poor installation technique and a host of other factors on the 'outgassing' boogyman.Don't listen to him, he's not a real sign guy.