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My recent Big Squeegee video was largely a result of some difficulty I'm having with my GBC Arctic Titan. I bought the Big Squeegee to assist with application of large prints etc. I think it will be a valuable asset around here for that, but I still prefer my laminator for applying lamination. It has served me well for a year and a half, but I've used it mostly on 38" material.
I sent an email to the local service provider on another island & since learned that the guy who came over to set up my machine, is away at a trade show this week, so I decided to see if I could learn anything here. I'll paste in my email to save some typing:
Dean,
I spoke to someone at your office today about some difficulty I am having with my laminator.
I usually have no trouble with the 38" material that serves the majority of my needs, but I also
stock 51" material & this represents at least 25% of my needs.
This is also expected to increase as my large format printing capability becomes better known.
I would be very interested in an additional training session if you have any other Maui business in the near future, & can offer me an affordable rate by combining a visit to me with other business on Maui. In the meantime, if you would be willing to discuss my concerns on the phone, maybe you could
identify some areas I have been failing to properly adjust the machine & could train me somewhat by phone. I would be most appreciative of your time on this matter.
In case it may help, I am forwarding a few photos from my attempt to get the 51" material loaded the other day. I reloaded both the laminate & the kraft paper at least 3 times to get the smoothest result I could. Once I got it as smooth as I could, I ran 6 to 8 feet of 30" wide material through as a
test, in hopes of confirming acceptable results before risking one of the 48" wide prints needing to be laminated. The wrinkling shown here began during the operation of laminating the 30" test piece.
After this unsuccessful attempt to get the 51" material working, I switched back to 38" material to get some smaller jobs going.
When I usually use 38" kraft paper with the 38" laminate, I have consistently been able to get better results,
but for the small amount of 30" lamination I needed to do, & the urgent need to get some 48" stuff done soon, I left the 51" kraft paper in.
I was able to get 8 to 10 yards of 30" material laminated without any real problems, but even though the 51" kraft paper was nice & flat after
I first loaded the 38" laminate... as I ran the jobs it began krinkling up. In the end, I removed the table to take some more pics.
You can see that the laminate is nice and smooth, but the paper is not.
I talked to one experienced guy I know who sell laminators, and he said the only factor he knows of that has a more significant effect on the longer rolls then the shorter ones has to do with a possibility of a slight crowning of a roller, or both rollers. He said if a short roll is lined up mostly on one side of that crown, it may not be effected, but the longer roll, may get uneven tension based on that center crown. He said that as a result the longer roll should be EXACTLY centered.
When I change laminate & kraft paper, I usually only loosen & remove one of the stops on the roll. The stop on the left of both rolls are set to match each other with about 1/8" offset, to keep the laminate on the kraft paper & never missing it, hitting the rollers. These are set where the guy who first trained us on the machine set them. On my 51" material, this setting puts the roll off center by only about 1/2 an inch.
I haven't had time to shift both rolls to correct that half inch discrepancy, but I plan to.
The other thing that friend said to check was loosen the gap between the two rollers to check the possibility of a difference in that gap. That made sense, & I checked. At a certain setting, on the left, I can fit 9 sheets of regular desktop printer paper in between the rolls before it turns the roller to squeeze in. On the right side, I can fit 16 sheets in. This does seem like a possible explanation, as the reduced tension from one side to the other would tend to steer anything passing through out of alignment, but the rolls feeding the material fight against that. This gap is not an adjustable part in the normal adjustment of the machine. I plan to remove the housing to look for ways to correct this, but haven't done so yet.
Before I get too crazy screwing around with the machine, I also feel like I don't fully understand this machine, basic as it may be. There are tension adjustments on the end of the supply roll for both laminate & kraft paper, as well as the take-up roll for the laminate backing paper. I really don't know the purpose of adjusting the tension of these, so I tend to keep them all just backed off full tension a little bit.
I know this was a lot of crap to read, but if anyone knows their laminator a lot better then I know mine, hopefully I've given enough information that someone may be able to recognize a source of this problem. I will have 15 sheets of 4x10 sintra arriving in 2 weeks & I hope to have the prints that go on them laminated by then. I have some time, but this is one of the bigger sources of concern in my shop at the moment.
Thanks in advance if anyone has some more suggestions for me.
I sent an email to the local service provider on another island & since learned that the guy who came over to set up my machine, is away at a trade show this week, so I decided to see if I could learn anything here. I'll paste in my email to save some typing:
Dean,
I spoke to someone at your office today about some difficulty I am having with my laminator.
I usually have no trouble with the 38" material that serves the majority of my needs, but I also
stock 51" material & this represents at least 25% of my needs.
This is also expected to increase as my large format printing capability becomes better known.
I would be very interested in an additional training session if you have any other Maui business in the near future, & can offer me an affordable rate by combining a visit to me with other business on Maui. In the meantime, if you would be willing to discuss my concerns on the phone, maybe you could
identify some areas I have been failing to properly adjust the machine & could train me somewhat by phone. I would be most appreciative of your time on this matter.
In case it may help, I am forwarding a few photos from my attempt to get the 51" material loaded the other day. I reloaded both the laminate & the kraft paper at least 3 times to get the smoothest result I could. Once I got it as smooth as I could, I ran 6 to 8 feet of 30" wide material through as a
test, in hopes of confirming acceptable results before risking one of the 48" wide prints needing to be laminated. The wrinkling shown here began during the operation of laminating the 30" test piece.
After this unsuccessful attempt to get the 51" material working, I switched back to 38" material to get some smaller jobs going.
When I usually use 38" kraft paper with the 38" laminate, I have consistently been able to get better results,
but for the small amount of 30" lamination I needed to do, & the urgent need to get some 48" stuff done soon, I left the 51" kraft paper in.
I was able to get 8 to 10 yards of 30" material laminated without any real problems, but even though the 51" kraft paper was nice & flat after
I first loaded the 38" laminate... as I ran the jobs it began krinkling up. In the end, I removed the table to take some more pics.
You can see that the laminate is nice and smooth, but the paper is not.
I talked to one experienced guy I know who sell laminators, and he said the only factor he knows of that has a more significant effect on the longer rolls then the shorter ones has to do with a possibility of a slight crowning of a roller, or both rollers. He said if a short roll is lined up mostly on one side of that crown, it may not be effected, but the longer roll, may get uneven tension based on that center crown. He said that as a result the longer roll should be EXACTLY centered.
When I change laminate & kraft paper, I usually only loosen & remove one of the stops on the roll. The stop on the left of both rolls are set to match each other with about 1/8" offset, to keep the laminate on the kraft paper & never missing it, hitting the rollers. These are set where the guy who first trained us on the machine set them. On my 51" material, this setting puts the roll off center by only about 1/2 an inch.
I haven't had time to shift both rolls to correct that half inch discrepancy, but I plan to.
The other thing that friend said to check was loosen the gap between the two rollers to check the possibility of a difference in that gap. That made sense, & I checked. At a certain setting, on the left, I can fit 9 sheets of regular desktop printer paper in between the rolls before it turns the roller to squeeze in. On the right side, I can fit 16 sheets in. This does seem like a possible explanation, as the reduced tension from one side to the other would tend to steer anything passing through out of alignment, but the rolls feeding the material fight against that. This gap is not an adjustable part in the normal adjustment of the machine. I plan to remove the housing to look for ways to correct this, but haven't done so yet.
Before I get too crazy screwing around with the machine, I also feel like I don't fully understand this machine, basic as it may be. There are tension adjustments on the end of the supply roll for both laminate & kraft paper, as well as the take-up roll for the laminate backing paper. I really don't know the purpose of adjusting the tension of these, so I tend to keep them all just backed off full tension a little bit.
I know this was a lot of crap to read, but if anyone knows their laminator a lot better then I know mine, hopefully I've given enough information that someone may be able to recognize a source of this problem. I will have 15 sheets of 4x10 sintra arriving in 2 weeks & I hope to have the prints that go on them laminated by then. I have some time, but this is one of the bigger sources of concern in my shop at the moment.
Thanks in advance if anyone has some more suggestions for me.