granite counter top care
sabunia portal
Direct toner transfer on Lexan is probably a bad idea.
Too late. Already melted it :D
I went out back and grabbed a chunk of that (1/4") and a nearby scrap of some granite looking Formica laminate. Both took the label surprisingly well (a PCB layout), but the clear plastic started "gooing up" on me and now has some spots with perfect traces and others with a bunch of little bubble looking specks, sort of like shattered safety glass. I'm almost wondering if lower heat or less time would have worked, but it's not a priority and I guess I'll be cleaning the iron before I do anything else with it. I do however want to try to get some print on some clear red plastic lens material. I'll be reading up on that site you listed, but it looks like a machine as well as the transfer material.
I've intentionally melted (postformed) the countertop material before, for studio furniture. The melting, or rather, "blistering" point is pretty high. I've got a book on it somewhere. I'm not even sure if you squashed down on it with something flat, that it would do anything wrong. It's usually being squashed around a tight radius while it's heated. I had to blast it with a heat gun in one spot to get the plastic to bubble. I think the pressure and heat is part of how it's actually made anyway :)
I've baked a bunch of paints on metal, but I didn't really know what I was doing. Everything worked OK at random time/temperatures, with the exception of some white handles I baked too long which turned sort of beige.
What is TRF?ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ ĂÂ -Take Care
George
Cytat
A sami byli dla siebie większym ciężarem niż ciemność. Mdr 17,20
A sami byli dla siebie większym ciężarem niż ciemność. Mdr 17,20_2