Bob, are you telling me there's a possibility that the two just suddenly decided there's a difference between an inch and an inch between them and from now on I will have to go through a different more time consuming process to get the contour cuts to work? I'm sorry, but I also don't understand the idea of printing my own contour marks. They're printed by the print job to correspond with the location of the contour cuts. How would I print them independently? (edit) Sorry, I saw the suggested link to Graphtec for that. Any idea from you or anyone on why this could suddenly become an issue? I deleted the setups for both printer and cutter and reloaded them in Production Manager to test, same results.
I have no idea why this should be happening but it is what it is. You might check the output feed compensation on both devices jst to see how close it actually is. As previously stated, 12' is a really long run for automatic mark sensing.
Doing manual marks is rather simple. The description is unfortunately lengthy...
First create the registration marks. The should be 20mm wide and high and the lines should be .3mm thick. That's 3/10 of a mm.
Create your image and the contour cut path.
Simple so far, eh?
Now create a rectangle that bounds the image and contour path. Make this rectangle of simple dimensions, like an integer number of inches high and wide. Remember the size of the rectangle.
Place the four registration marks at the four corners of the bounding rectangle.
Print the image and the registration marks. Do not print the contour cut path or the bounding rectangle.
Load the print into the plotter, position the blade within the first [lower right] registration mark.
Invoke the plotter's Auto Registration Mark Reading function. This is described in the Graphtec manual.
The plotter will read all four marks and then pause displaying what it thinks are the X and Y dimensions of the bounding rectangle described bu the marks. You enter the actual size of the bounding rectangle. That's why you kept is simple when you created it and remembered its size.
If. for some reason or another, the plotter's auto mark sensing fails, you can select the manual option where the plotter prompts you to position the blade at each of the four marks. The bounding rectangle correction works the same either way.
Make sure your software is set to no margin, no image offset, and no easy-weed box. You want it to think the entire cutable image is at 0,0.
Send the contour path and the registration marks to the plotter. It should cut the contour path and, unfortunately, the registration marks as well.
If you want to test it to see if it works and all of your setting are correct, select the light pen and see what it does. If it seems to be working, then select the blade and do it again starting back where you first invoked the plotter's auto mark sensing..
If you don't want to cut the registration marks, just make the contour path a different color, select 'cut all colors' and then specify not to cut the color of the marks. You can do this in Flexi, I'm not sure how to do it in other packages.
I do this all of the time for any image larger than ~4'. I learned how to do it because I grew weary of throwing away large prints that refused to auto sense properly out of Flexi. Once you get the hang of it you can do it in your sleep.