I need to adhere 8.5" x 11" sheets (5-mil plastic) to lexedge, and optionally another layer of adhesive on the other side of the plastic. It's not exactly 467MP (because I'll use some optically-clear adhesive such as 3M 8211), but I expect the process will be mostly the same for any adhesive.
Given that the lexedge is ~13" wide, I'm thinking I can print to say 10" wide (as each individual piece is < 2" x 1.5"), apply 12" adhesive, then attach the 8.5" x 11" sheets (such that I have 0.5" tolerance on either side. If I add another layer of adhesive, that would be 12" wide again.
I thought about using a large aluminum tube I have laying around (2.5" dia, ~0.5" wall), but would like some way to hold the material as I roll. I saw a machine for this (at 1:07 in this video),
[video=youtube;z53RJss_Bls]https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=UUluTjMklixHGGgjf77c-oXg&t=73&v=z53RJss_Bls[/video]
but it's way overkill. Is there something like this that has a hand roller perhaps? Or even better, a dual-roll holder that would let me use my plotter as this machine does -- to pull the material in and merge/sandwich them while it's sucked in. Of course I'll have to do this in multiple passes for the first layer of adhesive, then the plastic sheets, then the last adhesive layer.