ddubia
New Member
I started making signs when you had to have a can of paint and a brush, and I've made some mistakes in that time but nothing as costly as this one. I'll try to keep it as short and sweet as I can 'cause frankly, I don't want to talk about it. I want it to go away.
First I should mention I've never printed a full size wrap before. Everything up to now has been partial wraps with no overlaps. (I may have already said enough)
Full wrap on an extended 2004 Chevy van using 3M IJ180C-10 with 8518 over laminate. It has a background gradient of Dark Blue in the front to Light Blue in the middle to Dark Blue at the rear. There's some large graphics
along with some lettering which I chose to print and cut separate and apply over the initial install to ensure it was straight when finished.
I'm sure everyone's on the edge of their seat to hear what the blunder is. Well...
The blunder is that I set the overlap at 3" so I'd have 1.5" on each side of each panel except the ends. I ran three paneled files, each side and the back.
It printed nice, laminated very well. I cut the panels out of the material and when my son came in to begin the install he found there was no overlap between the back doors!
Dang, I figured. But I can reprint them in plenty of time. But I was getting nervous because sometimes things just ain't that simple. We went and checked the other panels and there's not an overlap on any of them!!
I've got a full size van printed and ready to install and have no overlaps between panels.
I went back into Onyx and brought up the files in Preflight and sure enough the tick box where you set your overlap amount is 0.0". I specifically set it at 3.0" before printing. At least I'm sure I did as I was reading through the User Manual as I was setting it up to make double dang sure I didn't make a mistake. And so I didn't commit it to print until I was sure I had all my ducks in a row.
I remembered that I did, at one point, adjust the panel sizes to avoid a seam at tough spot but that's all. Thinking maybe that caused the overlap to reset to 0.0" and I hadn't noticed, I again set the overlap and then purposefully adjusted the panel sizes but it had no effect on the overlap. So I'm at a complete loss as to how it happened. But it happened on all three files.
I know that sounds like I'm saying it just happened and couldn't have been my fault but I'm not blaming Onyx or anyone other than me. Been real busy and tired lately and I could have overlooked it somehow even though I thought I was being relentless in my quest for perfection. (I just now had the thought while writing this that maybe having just read about the overlaps and feeling I fully confident that I understood it made me feel as though I just did it). Hell, I don't know.
But figuring out how it happen is the least of my worries right now. I have no overlaps and need to get this installed.
Has anyone ever had this happen and come up with a reasonable install fix for it? This van job is no Lamborghini but I treat every one as though it were. I sure don't want to have to tell the customer his job won't be ready on time and I dang sure don't want to print the whole job over but if I must I will.
Somebody tell me no one will notice this and everything will be ok. Please? Lol
Can I print strips to place over the seams without them sticking out like big, swelled-up. pus filled sore thumbs? Can I melt the seams together with a torch so that nobody will notice? (Just kidding there. Trying not get drunk and get into a bar fight with myself.) I need someone to give me some kind of direction.
Any takers?
First I should mention I've never printed a full size wrap before. Everything up to now has been partial wraps with no overlaps. (I may have already said enough)
Full wrap on an extended 2004 Chevy van using 3M IJ180C-10 with 8518 over laminate. It has a background gradient of Dark Blue in the front to Light Blue in the middle to Dark Blue at the rear. There's some large graphics
along with some lettering which I chose to print and cut separate and apply over the initial install to ensure it was straight when finished.
I'm sure everyone's on the edge of their seat to hear what the blunder is. Well...
The blunder is that I set the overlap at 3" so I'd have 1.5" on each side of each panel except the ends. I ran three paneled files, each side and the back.
It printed nice, laminated very well. I cut the panels out of the material and when my son came in to begin the install he found there was no overlap between the back doors!
Dang, I figured. But I can reprint them in plenty of time. But I was getting nervous because sometimes things just ain't that simple. We went and checked the other panels and there's not an overlap on any of them!!
I've got a full size van printed and ready to install and have no overlaps between panels.
I went back into Onyx and brought up the files in Preflight and sure enough the tick box where you set your overlap amount is 0.0". I specifically set it at 3.0" before printing. At least I'm sure I did as I was reading through the User Manual as I was setting it up to make double dang sure I didn't make a mistake. And so I didn't commit it to print until I was sure I had all my ducks in a row.
I remembered that I did, at one point, adjust the panel sizes to avoid a seam at tough spot but that's all. Thinking maybe that caused the overlap to reset to 0.0" and I hadn't noticed, I again set the overlap and then purposefully adjusted the panel sizes but it had no effect on the overlap. So I'm at a complete loss as to how it happened. But it happened on all three files.
I know that sounds like I'm saying it just happened and couldn't have been my fault but I'm not blaming Onyx or anyone other than me. Been real busy and tired lately and I could have overlooked it somehow even though I thought I was being relentless in my quest for perfection. (I just now had the thought while writing this that maybe having just read about the overlaps and feeling I fully confident that I understood it made me feel as though I just did it). Hell, I don't know.
But figuring out how it happen is the least of my worries right now. I have no overlaps and need to get this installed.
Has anyone ever had this happen and come up with a reasonable install fix for it? This van job is no Lamborghini but I treat every one as though it were. I sure don't want to have to tell the customer his job won't be ready on time and I dang sure don't want to print the whole job over but if I must I will.
Somebody tell me no one will notice this and everything will be ok. Please? Lol
Can I print strips to place over the seams without them sticking out like big, swelled-up. pus filled sore thumbs? Can I melt the seams together with a torch so that nobody will notice? (Just kidding there. Trying not get drunk and get into a bar fight with myself.) I need someone to give me some kind of direction.
Any takers?