• I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes. Click to Support Signs101 ...

illuminated sign covered with calendered vinyl?

0igo

New Member
so i have a client that has a plastic board that has turned "yellow" due to long time in the sun.i was thinking about covering the whole thing with white calendared vinyl and place other vinyl on top of it. do you think this is a good idea? will light still be able to shine through it at night or not?

example of the sign (not actual sign)
 

Attachments

  • Tripple Threat  5.jpg
    Tripple Threat 5.jpg
    22.9 KB · Views: 84

rjssigns

Active Member
Time for a new panel. Just went through this with a client that brought me panels to reuse. Told him I won't reuse old panels because they could fail. As he walked past his truck he bumped a corner with his hand and a big chunhk of the panel fell off. He told me to get new ones.
 

AaronSSsignsKC

New Member
Need new panels cal vinyl will look bad and block all light. It will just wind up being something you replace again in 6 months cause it fails as well, I would sell the customer on new substrate or don't take the job.
 

Gino

Premium Subscriber
A translucent sheet of acrylic or polycarb will stop about 15% to 20% of light from going through. Only clear will allow 100% to pass. Add the yellowing and it's down another 5% or so. If you added translucent white, you'd be adding about 30%. So, you'd be near only 50% to 40% light coming through anymore. Use your specs with calendared and you'd stop almost all of the light from coming through. Basically, you would no longer have a backlit sign.

Like mentioned, time for a new piece of material.
 

Andy D

Active Member
I agree with what everyone said, it's foolish to try and use the customers existing panels
just because they're wanting to save a couple bucks, it looks like crap and if it's brittle
and cracks you're stuck with the cost of replacing it.
 
Top