Brandon708
New Member
Hi everyone,
I bought this R1000 printer almost 3 years ago now. It has been great but I have been noticing that the prints have been scratching very easily. What I mostly notice it on is the real estate signs I print. I use Maxmetal Digital Print ACM. I almost always do double sided prints (real estate signs). I am very careful with prints and try not to drag and handle them with care. I take them off the printer and bring them to the production table to trim and find that there are a bunch of scratches and wonder how the heck it happened. The ink just scratches way to easily. I even tried to clean the panel with Denatured Alcohol before the loading, but it doesn't help with the scratches. Just feel like I am wasting time doing it.
I realize it may be because there is some type of sharp object on the production table giving it scratches and I often clean or blow off the table before putting signs on it. But I am also having my installers say that dark color inks such as black being the worst. He says that if he has two sign panels that are wet back-to-back the entire print gets ruined from the water. With a printer of this price, I wouldn't expect such a failure. I would really hate to have to laminate every panel to avoid this. Even if I did there could be scratches before I laminate the signs.
What am I doing wrong?
I modified the profiles with different variations but still no luck. Anyone have a good profile or suggestions?
Brandon
I bought this R1000 printer almost 3 years ago now. It has been great but I have been noticing that the prints have been scratching very easily. What I mostly notice it on is the real estate signs I print. I use Maxmetal Digital Print ACM. I almost always do double sided prints (real estate signs). I am very careful with prints and try not to drag and handle them with care. I take them off the printer and bring them to the production table to trim and find that there are a bunch of scratches and wonder how the heck it happened. The ink just scratches way to easily. I even tried to clean the panel with Denatured Alcohol before the loading, but it doesn't help with the scratches. Just feel like I am wasting time doing it.
I realize it may be because there is some type of sharp object on the production table giving it scratches and I often clean or blow off the table before putting signs on it. But I am also having my installers say that dark color inks such as black being the worst. He says that if he has two sign panels that are wet back-to-back the entire print gets ruined from the water. With a printer of this price, I wouldn't expect such a failure. I would really hate to have to laminate every panel to avoid this. Even if I did there could be scratches before I laminate the signs.
What am I doing wrong?
I modified the profiles with different variations but still no luck. Anyone have a good profile or suggestions?
Brandon