Ken Hendrick
New Member
I recently installed a window perf on a back window. I cleaned it with alcohol first to make sure the window was clean. The following day, the customer called and said it was falling off. What could I have done wrong.
Time to pack it in and let the client know you've done all you can. Nothing will ever stick to that glass.I am having the same problem. We applied perf to 4 Dodge Pro Masters back windows. 2 of them came back with in a year the lam appeared cracked like when a warp has been on too long but with out the discoloration. We reprinted and installed and within a couple weeks the perf was rolling up. Re-did again with a different brand and again it's coming off with in a week. We have not run into this before. I am stumped.
If this is your experience then you will enjoy the results of some tweaking here! Obviously moving to anything other than solvent for windows is preferred. But if you're stuck on solvent, you absolutely can still blow out your runtime and turnaround. Running perf on the vinyl calibration is a classic mistake for "color matching". Your resolution/passes should be cut way back (often half) and your ink limits should pull down significantly (often 210-230 arena). Perf should blast out with low ink pile and properly ready for install within 4 hours. Oddly enough, over running the quality settings on perf is worse for it's performance.window perf needs 2 full days of outgassing before cut to final size
Never thought of that but actually makes sense. Funny enough somehow I end up having to print a lot of black or dark graphics, not sure how that would look with limited amount of ink, will do some tests.If this is your experience then you will enjoy the results of some tweaking here! Obviously moving to anything other than solvent for windows is preferred. But if you're stuck on solvent, you absolutely can still blow out your runtime and turnaround. Running perf on the vinyl calibration is a classic mistake for "color matching". Your resolution/passes should be cut way back (often half) and your ink limits should pull down significantly (often 210-230 arena). Perf should blast out with low ink pile and properly ready for install within 4 hours. Oddly enough, over running the quality settings on perf is worse for it's performance.
Thanks for the input, we've done plenty of perf never had this happen before.A common problem often overlooked is laminate tension. Thin, cast laminates are easily WAY over-tensioned during application. If it curls at all while sitting flat after lam, it's too tight. I have seen this in tons of shops and lam operators are often forgotten when it comes to training in any capacity.
If it's failing by spiriling back from the window? Too much lam tension. If it's warped but flat-ish after lifted? Adhesion issue. An improper laminate will always do this as well due to shrinkage rate. If it's a garbage perf like General Formulations or something then the failures will be unpredictable so ... Can't help you there
If it looks like an adhesion issue, additional contributing factors like glass coatings may be involved. I use dish soap (cheapest) and water - wipe hard to remove factory coatings! Elbow grease is required to remove anything made of oil or silicone! ISO wipedown before final install to remove any soap residue/detergents and touchpoints.
If this is your experience then you will enjoy the results of some tweaking here! Obviously moving to anything other than solvent for windows is preferred. But if you're stuck on solvent, you absolutely can still blow out your runtime and turnaround. Running perf on the vinyl calibration is a classic mistake for "color matching". Your resolution/passes should be cut way back (often half) and your ink limits should pull down significantly (often 210-230 arena). Perf should blast out with low ink pile and properly ready for install within 4 hours. Oddly enough, over running the quality settings on perf is worse for it's performance.