We routinely print acrylic on a Scitex FB700. We are reverse printing with white ink and in generally works okay. The prints are fragile, and we often put a clear backer on them to protect the print. That is somewhat annoying, but it hasn't been a big deal.
However, without fail, we end up with at least one piece of acrylic that prints wrong. Sometimes the material moves during printing. Other times the feed rate seems to be off near the end of the print. And other times we end up with the margins wrong (though this one could be human error more than anything).
Because the prints scratch easily, we are always able to take the ink off and try again, but it is time-consuming. Just this morning we had 10-12 acrylic small acrylic prints to complete (24" x 24" and smaller). It took the entire morning. We had to clean off and reprint at least two pieces, and the whole procedure just takes a lot longer than we would like.
I sometimes send overflow work to a vendor, and they face mount prints on acrylic using some kind of optically clear adhesive. What product(s) can I use to try this? We used to print clear vinyl and add white backers to acrylic; that was prone to a lot of error as well and was also time-consuming. We're trying to find a way to produce acrylic prints more reliably. A lot of our lost time is due to redoing prints regularly. We just want a way to get it right the first time.
So, I'm looking for advice to print directly on acrylic more reliably or how to try face mounting prints as an alternative.
However, without fail, we end up with at least one piece of acrylic that prints wrong. Sometimes the material moves during printing. Other times the feed rate seems to be off near the end of the print. And other times we end up with the margins wrong (though this one could be human error more than anything).
Because the prints scratch easily, we are always able to take the ink off and try again, but it is time-consuming. Just this morning we had 10-12 acrylic small acrylic prints to complete (24" x 24" and smaller). It took the entire morning. We had to clean off and reprint at least two pieces, and the whole procedure just takes a lot longer than we would like.
I sometimes send overflow work to a vendor, and they face mount prints on acrylic using some kind of optically clear adhesive. What product(s) can I use to try this? We used to print clear vinyl and add white backers to acrylic; that was prone to a lot of error as well and was also time-consuming. We're trying to find a way to produce acrylic prints more reliably. A lot of our lost time is due to redoing prints regularly. We just want a way to get it right the first time.
So, I'm looking for advice to print directly on acrylic more reliably or how to try face mounting prints as an alternative.