I am going crazy over this issue.
For example, I print 2" wide by 1" tall decals on 54" material and contour cut them. The decals on the outer edge of the material cut fine but the inner ones or offset along the y axis. It is a gradual transition along the x axis from good to offset back to good. It almost seams like the center of the material is bowed.
I run the same job on a mimaki jv33 and it is spot on which rules out the cutter (FC8000). I have tried numerous materials from oracal, avery, briteline and 3M.
Has anyone else run into this problem?
Thanks
All Latex printers work by adjusting speed (pass mode), temperature (curing, specifically), and inkload (how much ink is set in both the restrictions and the global ink limits).
What is happening is from too much heat, mainly curing, but possibly some drying temps as well (generally, drying isn't the culprit for deformations, curing is). You want to bring down the curing temperatures to bring the media under the media deformation point. The less expensive the SAV, the more likely to warp as a general rule of thumb. Cheap monomeric calendared is worse than polymeric is worse than a good cast, generally, and some SAV has better liners than others from a latex point of view.
You can drop those curing temps while you print in the front panel. If the ink begins to get greasy, then you have to either increase temp or change to a slower pass mode. For temp sensitive SAV, I run 12pass, 200F (or less, I have gone as low as 185F) curing and 125F drying. Then I build a color preset around those two fixed settings: slower speed and low heat. Use the onboard spectro to build the transitions (lower the light inks to 15 and cut them off at around 55, you do not want too much light ink, Onyx will over-ink by default) and restrict the dark inks to around 75, look at the curve and find the sweet spot--remember, lower temps means lower inks). Then run a linearization and a global ink limit (advanced tab in Onyx for global). Link to an existing ICC, like the HP Permanent SAV. Now you have a low temp, slower speed, and a inkload that corresponds to the speed and temps. You'll find the SAV will be much easier to deal with this way, nice and flat and no warping and minimal deformation, and if you do run the straightness optimization, it will only need a small adjustment.
Best,
Timothy