I use 3M IJ-180 all day.
Why? because it has never failed me despite less than ideal conditions.
We send crews to sites up to 10 hours away in trucks that get 7 to 15 miles to the gallon. If it fails then the fuel itself will cost more than a roll of vinyl.
In addition, many the sites are gas stations. The pumps, canopies and our installers are covered in diesel and gasoline. Of course we clean them but alcohol doesn't always work and have to bust out lacquer thinner. Also we work year around and have been known to install vinyl down to 40 degrees.
A failure mass failure of Oracal 210 cost us thousands. I thought I would be OK because this run of Oracal 210 was installed in my relatively clean shop but once out there it shrunk and we had to put many hours driving to out of the way stations to replace graphics.
All the stuff they say about 3M is true regarding their cost and business practices, but you know what they don't say? "3M makes crappy vinyl".
You are comparing cast wrap vinyl to calendared laminate. Was that just a typo on your part?
We're a predominantly Orafol shop here and with good reason, at least in my opinion.
Orafol products are much more affordable. (Many believe you get what you pay for)
Orafol is a German company and I like quality German products and engineering. (3M's engineering and research & development dwarfs that of Orafol)
Orafol has been in business for 208 years. 3M has been in business for barely half that. (LOL oh no...3M only in business for a measly 114 years) (was Orafol doing adhesive vinyls then?)
Orafol's focus is primarily adhesive products. 3M is widely diversified, so adhesive products is only a part of their focus. This focus is also more widespread since they offer both consumer and commercial adhesive products. The same can also be said for Avery. (is this supposed to be an reasonable argument?)
3M exercises shady business tactics. They will probably threaten me with a lawsuit just for posting this because that's how they roll. Okay, I probably went a little extreme on this one, but I'm sure you get my point. (evidence?)
3M cares about themselves more than the people in this industry. This should be evident to many of you by now. The same can also be said for Avery. (evidence? How is Orafol different?)
Orafol makes an excellent product, so who needs 3M? But seriously, brand recognition is likely responsible for much of 3M's success. (apparently a lot of people feel is isn't as "excellent" as 3M or they wouldn't pay more for it.)
You are correct, I did not mean to compare IJ-180 to Oracal 210 directly. I told the story to show my extreme costs are when graphics fail. Yes, I could use a cast Oracal vinyl and save a small amount but I don't have the same confidence in Oracal as 3M. When the 210 a five-year vinyl began to fail a few weeks after install, I contacted Oracal and received the typical run-around. Despite me installing the vinyl exactly as instructed, they would not stand behind the product. I then switched to IJ-35 for the limited work I do with calendared and have had no failures.
My poorly worded point was that 3M, in my experience, makes a premium product that performs regardless of the less than ideal circumstances I put it through. They may be expensive but it is the bar that other manufactures are trying to reach. I always hear "X-manufacturer vinyl is just as good as 3M". When I have a job that I cant afford to have fail I only use cast 3M.
I apologize for the confusion.
I've been using Oraguard 210 for 3 years and haven't had one fail me yet. It's just like the mass Avery screw up with the spliced rolls, it costed sign shops hundreds of thousands of dollars. It was fixed and people started using it again.
I should correct myself. As Tim Toad stated 210 is the laminate I used, the vinyl was 3165RA.
You are correct, I did not mean to compare IJ-180 to Oracal 210 directly. I told the story to show my extreme costs are when graphics fail. Yes, I could use a cast Oracal vinyl and save a small amount but I don't have the same confidence in Oracal as 3M. When the 210 a five-year vinyl began to fail a few weeks after install, I contacted Oracal and received the typical run-around. Despite me installing the vinyl exactly as instructed, they would not stand behind the product. I then switched to IJ-35 for the limited work I do with calendared and have had no failures.
My poorly worded point was that 3M, in my experience, makes a premium product that performs regardless of the less than ideal circumstances I put it through. They may be expensive but it is the bar that other manufactures are trying to reach. I always hear "X-manufacturer vinyl is just as good as 3M". When I have a job that I cant afford to have fail I only use cast 3M.
I apologize for the confusion.
Oracal 3165RA is also calendared vinyl. I would never expect it to perform like IJ180.