Looking for advice from other Roland VersaCamm owners, particularly those who use the new VP-540.
I'm trying to find a solution for getting proper looking prints on 3M 180C Controltac material when printing to it with our new 54" Roland VersaCamm VP-540 printer.
The printer works great on a lots of other materials we've used, but I'm getting banding issues when printing small test images on the Controtac vinyl. I don't think I have the right printing profile loaded in the Roland VersaWorks software (I have the PGCT - Premium Cast Vinyl [ESM] profile selected). There doesn't appear to be any specific material profiles available for high quality repositional vinyls. Is this something I need to download and add to VersaWorks?
I don't think the art file itself is the problem, it's a 4' X 10' Photoshop EPS file at 72ppi native resolution.
One other thing I had to do was turn down the material heating elements. When the Controltac is heated the material pinch rollers leave indentations in the vinyl and then that shows up in the print. Thankfully, it's very easy to cancel and delete a job out of the printer before it has gone very far.
I'm trying to find a solution for getting proper looking prints on 3M 180C Controltac material when printing to it with our new 54" Roland VersaCamm VP-540 printer.
The printer works great on a lots of other materials we've used, but I'm getting banding issues when printing small test images on the Controtac vinyl. I don't think I have the right printing profile loaded in the Roland VersaWorks software (I have the PGCT - Premium Cast Vinyl [ESM] profile selected). There doesn't appear to be any specific material profiles available for high quality repositional vinyls. Is this something I need to download and add to VersaWorks?
I don't think the art file itself is the problem, it's a 4' X 10' Photoshop EPS file at 72ppi native resolution.
One other thing I had to do was turn down the material heating elements. When the Controltac is heated the material pinch rollers leave indentations in the vinyl and then that shows up in the print. Thankfully, it's very easy to cancel and delete a job out of the printer before it has gone very far.