Down pressure is the critical factor, not so much blade exposure. In theory, if the down pressure is properly set and there is sufficient blade exposed to cut through the media and leave an ever so slight indentation on the backing without dragging the blade holder over the media, then further blade exposure is harmless but unnecessary. That's the theory anyway.
Thanks for this, I've been very curious what effect blade exposure had as there is little information on what is "correct".
Not sure if anyone else mentioned this, but didn't see it. Try letting your vinyl sit for a couple days after contour cutting it (if you can), before weeding it. Overlaminate will contract slightly over time, pulling the cuts apart and making it easier to weed. Worth a try. Personally I never have that problem. I use 3m 180ijcv3 and 3m 8518 laminate.
Thanks, but I have tried this as well. Same results...
As was also mentioned, using a fresh sharp blade when possible will help as well. You might also slow down the speed(velocity) slightly to see if you get improved results. I have a lot of customers contour cutting similar laminated materials with the SummaCut models without issues, so I would think with a few small tweaks you should be able to get this dialed in and weeding better.
Thanks Phil for the thorough response. I have to say I have been very impressed with the customer service from Summa all around.
I have tried every combination of settings that I can think of - changed velocity up/down, adjusted offset, changed pressure up/down, opticut on/off, smoothing on/off - and I'm getting the same results. Honestly I really don't think it has to do with the cutter. One interesting thing I noticed was when I was doing the pressure test with the square with an X through it. I noticed when I held it up to the light and separated the X it has the adhesive fingers I mentioned earlier. Once it comes apart and breaks that adhesive if I put the X back together and try to separate again I am getting the exact same adhesive sticking back together.
In my mind the issue is with the laminate. Whether this is just normal or this laminate is the issue, I'm not sure. Leads to my question - is there such a thing as a bad batch of laminate? I also had a super nasty silvering problem with this laminate too that most led me to believe was very abnormal, so it makes me wonder if this batch has an issue. I am tempted to buy another roll just for test purposes. Thoughts?