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Allen datagraph firmware4/1/2023 Then throw in some reflective and cut 30' of tanker graphics that tracks perfectly. Its no prob to cut 3/8" vinyl letters (can go smaller but its no fun) and power weed em all day long with this machine. I do a lot of directory signs that require small letters if I dont engrave or print them. I now have a Summa Durasign and its perftect. Hey, Ill mention Ioloine - had one, never goin' back! Summa offered me $1250 on a trade-in which sounds decent but I may opt to keep it or wait for a better offer. My D610 was built heavy duty which I like. Summa called me at my shop and went over the specifics of the T750. Ontime 3223 | From: Sodus,NY,USA | Registered: Dec 1998 I never was without tangential knife.and for good reason.They do a better job,especially in heavy materials. Now that I have friction feed.I can use the old standby.brown craft paper.īy the way.Vinylmaster Pro and Summa make a"lovely couple!!!!!!!"įriction feed is new to me,I like using scraps that were always wasted before. I draw patterns with penplot.then perforate by hand with a coarser wheel than you can buy. I used to buy lots of sprocket material at inflated prices, but now buy full width and cut it down 750 plus spill which covers most jobs with ease.Ī little bit of England in a corner of 1552 | From: Stockholm, Sweden | Registered: Nov 1998 I would stick with Summa, I would also think you would get more for a used T750 in the future than some of the other, more basic plotters. I also did a cross grade to Signlab Colormaster 5 at the same time, for not much more money than Gerber wanted to upgrade to Omega, and kept my GA software in the deal which means I have 2 design stations and can make use of the benefits of 2 good programs that compliment each other in different ways. I have always liked the heavyduty feel to the Summa Pro series, and although over here I got have bought a Graphtec FC 4100 full width machine for not much more, I decided to go with Summa,and buy a Tangential machine for cutting sandblast resist, and nice clean corners on letters, I can't fault the machine or the service. I have been a Gerber shop for years and had been brainwashed into thinking there was NO life after Gerber, (reminds me of my strict catholic upbringing and straying from the flock!)Īnyway I have strayed, I bought a Summa T750 a year ago with OPUS, but without their pouncing tool, only because I have kept my Sprint and S 750 and I pounce with them, I looked at lots of plotters before taking the plunge. Posts: 2785 | From: Wyandotte, MI USA | Registered: Jan 1999 It seems the Ioline and Allen Datagraph plotters don't get mentioned much.Īll change isn't progress, and all progress isn't forward. If this turns out to be another survey as to what and why you use your current plotter, that would help too. I notice the Vinyl Express plotters have tangetial emulation for a lot less, but wonder if it works anywhere near as well. Summa has a nice plotter with all these features, but by adding OPUS and pounce and tangetial features it drives the price around I want to cut more intricate and smaller graphics and I understand this will help. Is tangetial cutting something worth paying for? Pounce capability and contour cutting on prints to name two. My present cutter is a Summa D610 (6 yrs.old)Īnd I would like to upgrade to one with better features. I have done searches on past topics and still don't have enough information on what I need. The Letterville BullBoard » Old Archives » Plotter choices & features My profile login | search | faq | calendar | im | forum home Letterville Bull Board Letterville | Bull Board The Letterville BullBoard: Plotter choices & features
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