I made the same thing and almost posted it here yesterday. I upgraded to using bearings, etc. It works well enough to slit a few rolls here and there. It would be nice to not have to hold the knife by hand. The whole thing is a good candidate for some 8020 extruded. I think I have about $10 in mine for the pipe plug. The rest I had laying around.If you are a DIYer here’s a basic design that could be improved upon.
I have few dead hdd laying around that I was planning on taking apart with my son,Two things. I was trying to find either the pair I have, or an image of them, but they make these scissors from two bearings fit right against one another. The pair I had worked on magnetic sheeting, some vinyls, and 1/32" rowmark engraving materials. I was wondering how these would hold up in a traditional laminator, just pushing the material through. Victor's fancy knives would probably work better, but I found these regardless, so here's the worlds coolest safety scissor:
Second, I have been mulling over the idea of a premium pizza slicer that Humble brought up (which I'm sure is just a garbage blade/handle in a fancy package), and I'm like, I just need a thin piece, with a tight bearing, something that would typically spin fast, something stiff.... I present, the most premium diy pizza slicer:Rotary Scissors | Slice
The Slice® 10598 Rotary Scissors are bladeless, so maximize your safety, and this lightweight, durable, ergonomic tool is ideal for extended use. Learn more…www.sliceproducts.com
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It's a HDD platter and bearing, sharpened on a bench grinder, held with a c clamp. Someone tell me how toxic this is.
I wish I could found something similar with horizontal cutter that would cut at specific size.about to order this, $900 with 12 knifes, hard to beat
fotoba or flexa miura , but be ready to spend some $$$I wish I could found something similar with horizontal cutter that would cut at specific size.
I know fotoba and flexa. They are indeed very expensive. I also know the royal soverign trimmer. I've tried it and it's not very precise.fotoba or flexa miura , but be ready to spend some $$$
or this for a cheaper version if you can come up with a way to combine it with media feeding/measuring
https://www.lexjet.com/royal-sovereign-electric-trimmers-65in?
Perhaps, an old plotter used purely for the drive control mechanism - I'm assuming that hpgl or similar is an open standard. Fit the drive with sufficient rubber/silicone pinch wheels... Perhaps even incorporate an optical sensor, to read a basic barcode (say a double black line to act as a cut mark...?)fotoba or flexa miura , but be ready to spend some $$$
or this for a cheaper version if you can come up with a way to combine it with media feeding/measuring
https://www.lexjet.com/royal-sovereign-electric-trimmers-65in?
I guess could be done with graphtec without any modification, just make a file with two dots at the needed distance, send how ever many copies are needed with auto cross cut between copiesPerhaps, an old plotter used purely for the drive control mechanism - I'm assuming that hpgl or similar is an open standard. Fit the drive with sufficient rubber/silicone pinch wheels... Perhaps even incorporate an optical sensor, to read a basic barcode (say a double black line to act as a cut mark...?)I
Yeah, but you get that janky cut edge.I guess could be done with graphtec without any modification, just make a file with two dots at the needed distance, send how ever many copies are needed with auto cross cut between copies
Edit the advance distance and have a non-jank clean cutYeah, but you get that janky cut edge.
Mine cross cuts pretty cleanly and I haven't changed blade in foreverYeah, but you get that janky cut edge.
Wild, on 3m vinyl with clear backer, it shows each cut, with the middle being a 1/16" shorter than the rest. Maybe the film is 'stouter' than the paper backed stuff, and each plunge is drawing the material backwards, until the last cut which is not a plunge.
Doesn't that entail swapping the blade position? That seems super time consuming for a cross cut operation...Perf cut instead of cross and you can have a really nice smooth cut.
Wait, what? Is it not identical to the fc8600?Our cross cutter on our fc9000 is full
the fc8600 and fc9000 are cross cutters are the sameWait, what? Is it not identical to the fc8600?