Graphtec s oem solution for cutting reflective vinyl and sandblast stencil is a thicker 1 5mm blade in a red blade holder.
What blade angle for cutting vinyl.
So if you re in the graphtec camp when you load a roll of reflective you ll remove the entire blue tipped blade holder and drop in a red tipped holder housing a robust 1 5mm blade.
Using the framing square to guide your blade begin cutting along the marked line at a 45 degree angle.
The cutter is designed to cut completely through the vinyl without cutting completely through the backing.
It s used for cardstock and vinyl mostly.
This blade has a steeper blade angle 60 degrees vs 45 degrees for the other fine point blades and harder more durable steel.
If the blade angle isn t high enough the blade can actually drag through the material and create vinyl ears causing a poor quality cut.
Most vinyl materials have two layers a release liner or backing and the vinyl itself.
You can do this using a mitre box and saw.
The deep point blade is a special blade that cuts deeper than the standard fine point blade.
I use this blade for 90 of my cricut cutting projects.
I have two blade holders for my graphtec one set for 3 mil vinyl and the other set much longer for cutting template material both are 60 blades.
Inversely using a 60 degree blade on everything is a waste of a blade.
Cutting vinyl railing may require you to cut angled corners at the point where railing changes directions or abuts a fence post at an angle.
Use an angle grider to cut vinyl in extreme colds and there is virtually no chances of breaking or chipping it.
2 i m too lazy to keep switching between different types of blades.
I can quickly swap them back and forth and don t have to worry about tweaking the blade length each time.
An increased amount of blade dragging through the material when cutting fine detail can cause what they call vinyl ears parts lifted up.
Because not all of the blade s cutting area is used you will also need to change blades more frequently since the sharper.
A lower angle 45 degree is great for thin materials while a steeper angle 60 degrees has a more vertical cutting orientation that penetrates deeper.
This is a special.
You should apply a moderate amount of pressure to cut roughly halfway through your vinyl plank.