Hopefully not just fixed to to the wooden slats!I THINK THERE ARE BRACKETS MOUNTED TO THE WOOD SLATS THAT THE SIGN IS BOLTED TO, SEE BOLT ON BOTTOM SHOULD BE SIMILAR BOLTS ON TOP. ROMOVE THOSE AND SIGN SHOULD COME OFF THEN YOU WILL BE ABLE TO SEE ALL THE GUTS FROM THE BACK
Anyone on this list an create this?I have a client wanting to match his neighboring sign and I dont know how this one is made... I did look at SignComp and cant figure out how they made it. Obviously not talking about the dimensional letters but the frame and the face. View attachment 174089
We just revisted a bunch of signs we installed in 2015, all powder coated, and all of them look like chalky trash.Hopefully, powder coated.
Lol, it took me a few minutes to figure out what you are talking about with the screw, you Americans and your inferior Phillips screws, Robertson square heads all day long!We just revisted a bunch of signs we installed in 2015, all powder coated, and all of them look like chalky trash.
This looks like a piece of .125" aluminum, glued to a 2x2x.125 aluminum angle frame, with gemini letters, with 1.5" aluminum angle clips, probably mounted to that vertical metal piece running behind the wood. Why they'd opt for a pan head screw over a counter sunk screw is beyond me. Also, the installer deserves to have his impact license revoked for the horrors he wrought upon that bottom screw...
That looks like .080 aluminum facing welded to an extrusion, such as EX-7 then painted. The letters are most likely a Gemini 1/4" aluminum letter painted with a pin mount method, bolted on from behind. We have made a few signs like this over the years. I assume it's non illuminated? We could certainly build this for you, but we are in Canada. a little bit far i would assume for farming out, assuming your in the states somewhere?I have a client wanting to match his neighboring sign and I dont know how this one is made... I did look at SignComp and cant figure out how they made it. Obviously not talking about the dimensional letters but the frame and the face. View attachment 174089
more likely, yes, a bracket on top that you sit the sign, like and L bracket and at the bottom another one like a reverse L to be screwed it, just like the screw at the bottom. also, I can say that is powder coated including the screws.I THINK THERE ARE BRACKETS MOUNTED TO THE WOOD SLATS THAT THE SIGN IS BOLTED TO, SEE BOLT ON BOTTOM SHOULD BE SIMILAR BOLTS ON TOP. ROMOVE THOSE AND SIGN SHOULD COME OFF THEN YOU WILL BE ABLE TO SEE ALL THE GUTS FROM THE BACK
We just revisted a bunch of signs we installed in 2015, all powder coated, and all of them look like chalky trash.
This looks like a piece of .125" aluminum, glued to a 2x2x.125 aluminum angle frame, with gemini letters, with 1.5" aluminum angle clips, probably mounted to that vertical metal piece running behind the wood. Why they'd opt for a pan head screw over a counter sunk screw is beyond me. Also, the installer deserves to have his impact license revoked for the horrors he wrought upon that bottom screw...
Yes, square is king, but aside from the trailer industry here, nobody will touch them here in the states.Robertson square heads all day long!
You may be right, but depending on the scale of sign, tube would be twice the cost of angle and require extra long hardware and twice as much drilling to install. For whatever reason, one of my salesmen always specs tube frames, and I'm forever having him revise drawings and specs from tube to angle.Looks like square aluminum tube frame (1.5" x 1.5"?) with a .125" aluminum face. Screws shown on bottom (and top?) to attach to angle brackets on the building.
Beats me, I know my matthews paints are bullet proof, and much less hassle having a painter in house.Perhaps you have a lousy powder coater ??
I love the buried head wood screws that use torx, otherwise I never touch them unless I'm reclaiming a magnet from a HDD.We use torx