We make a lot of die cut shapes out of magnetic material (individual numbers/letters and various shaped "panels") and would like to leverage our wide format printer to help with production time on these.
Currently, if we are making a given number that has a white outline with a red number, we cut the number itself from white magnetic and then cut the red part from vinyl. In order to register it when assembling, we scissor trim around the end of the red vinyl part before removing the outline part and them remove that strip of vinyl and put app tape on. We then use the backing paper to line it up and create a hinge to apply. Same procedure for a what we call a number panel, or placard. E.g a white rectangle with black numbers and text on it.
We make these same things with many other materials as well, but all those materials are printable, so we just print with registration marks, laminate, and cut on the cutter. I can't do the same with magnetic as our cutters with OPOS/Whatever Graphtec calls it won't do the magnetic and the flatbed doesn't have the camera/OPOS.
In an ideal world, I would print a "number" with both colors, slap it on magnetic material cut the same shape and send it out the door. The issue I am having is that no matter the registration method I use to assemble the two pieces, I get a very small variance, and the base magnetic color shows. Not an issue on white/white but putting something with red edges on a white base is almost impossible and any miss is really apparent.
Any thoughts on a better way to do this? Printing directly on magnetic and then die cutting would be best, but our flatbed is only 5 years old and it would be a huge upgrade to add registration mark sensing to it.
Thanks in advance
DaveW
Currently, if we are making a given number that has a white outline with a red number, we cut the number itself from white magnetic and then cut the red part from vinyl. In order to register it when assembling, we scissor trim around the end of the red vinyl part before removing the outline part and them remove that strip of vinyl and put app tape on. We then use the backing paper to line it up and create a hinge to apply. Same procedure for a what we call a number panel, or placard. E.g a white rectangle with black numbers and text on it.
We make these same things with many other materials as well, but all those materials are printable, so we just print with registration marks, laminate, and cut on the cutter. I can't do the same with magnetic as our cutters with OPOS/Whatever Graphtec calls it won't do the magnetic and the flatbed doesn't have the camera/OPOS.
In an ideal world, I would print a "number" with both colors, slap it on magnetic material cut the same shape and send it out the door. The issue I am having is that no matter the registration method I use to assemble the two pieces, I get a very small variance, and the base magnetic color shows. Not an issue on white/white but putting something with red edges on a white base is almost impossible and any miss is really apparent.
Any thoughts on a better way to do this? Printing directly on magnetic and then die cutting would be best, but our flatbed is only 5 years old and it would be a huge upgrade to add registration mark sensing to it.
Thanks in advance
DaveW