So today we ran the exact same print cut file through the plotter, there were about 15 of them, say 30" long. It scanned the 1st 2 barcodes and no more so we had to manually do each one after. Then it randomly skewed these things, not like the material shifted because 1 would be good and the next bad, I'm talking like 1-2" off. This thing is a real POS and not the first time it did this. I had some long cuts before, 4 of the same file that it did it with too but I chalked it up to being a longer cut but honestly that was only maybe 5-6 feet. I have decided that I am going to sell it and get a Summa. I can already foresee months of back and forth over warranty and do this, try that, adjust this, some random excuses, questioning my files, material etc etc with this thing and more and more money wasted. I'm really annoyed. I'm just glad it wasn't a $100k machine.
I watched this thread but didn't want to contribute a "you shoulda bought this / GM vs Ford fan boy" type of reply.
Graphtecs are a great cutter for vinyl lettering from coloured vinyl, we've had at least 8 starting with their first 500mm unit in the early 90s.
For profile cutting printed graphics though, particularly laminated polymeric prints, they are not in the same galaxy as the Summa S class.
After years of frustration with the Graphtec FC7000s and FC8000s, we'd just come to accept that that was as good as profile cutting gets.
It's not.
I picked up a 6 month old barely used Summa S2160T for a steal 3 years ago (AU$5,000).
Knowing what I know now, I'd gladly pay the full $24k for a new one if I had to.
We profile cut 5 metre + jobs every day on laminated poly as well a big cast truck sides, 10 metres is the longest we've done.
I usually add a little bleed to jobs, but honestly it's that accurate it doesn't need any.
It was an absolute game changer for us.