@@Exploramix Thanks, my card is thicker but I may give it a go as its not that expensive. Did where you purchased also supply replacement parts. I'm thinking I'll probably need to replace the blades often.
Gosh. I just returned this. I could not get an accurate cut through a print with two full bleed prints. After 10 tries it simply can’t be that accurate. Ritatrim Pro it is for me.
This is not the correct way to set up the machine. The cutters/creasers should align with the metal rollers in the grooves. The blue rollers should be on top of the white rollers adjusted to the thickness of the paper. Setting the machine up as shown will ruin the white rollers and dull the blades.
Mine can't, the dies are not ground properly, but maybe with some modifications it should be possible. You'd need to figure out a way to protect it from the rubber wheels as well. Maybe put it on top of a foil or another sheet of paper.
I don't have it anymore but if I remember correctly, it is possible to adjust with few screws on side the pressure of rollers to some point. However, what could be a problem is a fast speed of rollers and you can't adjust the speed without tempering the electronics.
It's not a good machine for adjustments and fine work. It does what it does but expecting to fine tune the speed or else is unrealistic. I got rid off it fairly quickly.
Thanks for the video. How good are the cutters? Would this trim card from each side and give a clean edge for greeting cards?
@@Exploramix Thanks, my card is thicker but I may give it a go as its not that expensive. Did where you purchased also supply replacement parts. I'm thinking I'll probably need to replace the blades often.
Price
150 eur two years ago
Gosh. I just returned this. I could not get an accurate cut through a print with two full bleed prints. After 10 tries it simply can’t be that accurate. Ritatrim Pro it is for me.
Could this machine be used to crease or score corrugated cardboard to make the cardboard easier to fold?
👍
Does that work on cardstock?
Less likely. Max thickness would be like 1mm. Those spinning wheels are quite "fidlicky"
This is not the correct way to set up the machine. The cutters/creasers should align with the metal rollers in the grooves. The blue rollers should be on top of the white rollers adjusted to the thickness of the paper. Setting the machine up as shown will ruin the white rollers and dull the blades.
Thanks!
Can it handle food grade wax paper??
For cutting - yes. For creasing - it will depend on the type of the paper, thickness, etc.
Available in India?
It should be. Google the word VEVOR creasing machine
could this crease tissue paper without cutting through it?
Mine can't, the dies are not ground properly, but maybe with some modifications it should be possible. You'd need to figure out a way to protect it from the rubber wheels as well. Maybe put it on top of a foil or another sheet of paper.
I don't have it anymore but if I remember correctly, it is possible to adjust with few screws on side the pressure of rollers to some point. However, what could be a problem is a fast speed of rollers and you can't adjust the speed without tempering the electronics.
It's not a good machine for adjustments and fine work. It does what it does but expecting to fine tune the speed or else is unrealistic. I got rid off it fairly quickly.
@@Exploramix what did you replace it with? Difficult to find things like this outside of industrial use :)
How much
180 euros