My first plot

Posted by Kathleen Fasanella on Mar 17, 2008 at 4:49 pm / Patterns / Trackback

I’m so excited, I’m finally far enough in my CAD training -do pity those Optitex trainers!- that I’ve put out my first plot. I don’t know if you’ve ever seen one of these plotters run (mine is a 72″ Ioline, that model gets consistently rave reviews) but it’s a trip. Only a video camera will capture the full effect. For now, you’ll have to settle for a photo. By the way, this is what I’ve been working on most of the day. I have another training session tomorrow, so posting will again be sparse.

Now I have to figure out how to get it off the take up roll…

Oh, the pattern I plotted was this one. All that’s left is to do one final sew by, write some instructions and then send it out to some pattern testers that I’ve yet to recruit…


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7 Responses to “My first plot”

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Alan
March 17th, 2008
5:32 PM

When I moved my factory from the US to the Dominican Republic we got very tired of sending markers by FEDEX. We bought a Gerber infinty inkjet 72″ plotter and its been pretty reliable. Let us know how you make out with the Optiplex. Is the optiplex compatible with both Gerber and Lectra?

Grace
March 17th, 2008
5:38 PM

Ooh, can I test the pattern?

Kathleen
March 17th, 2008
6:37 PM

Hi Alan, Optitex is the CAD software so I doubt it’s compatible with Gerber/Lectra :) . The plotter is an Ioline. Ioline basically has the reputation of being the workhorse plotter in the industry. Run forever, hard to break and easy to fix if they do. I think Ioline can help you configure their plotter to run under Gerber/Lectra but the latter two won’t of course, because they want you to buy their proprietary unit.

Alan
March 17th, 2008
7:28 PM

Hi Kathleen, Thanks for the clarification. We don’t do the pattern work, grading or marking; just the plotting. A funny story: we ended up buying the premium maintenance plan ($205/month) because we had two $600 repair bills in three months. I guess a family of mice liked to nest in the electrical panel and short out the circuit boards. The Gerber salesman was right however, there are no moving parts to fail with the inkjet plotter.

Birgitte Mutrux
March 17th, 2008
8:03 PM

Hip hip Hurray! I’m so happy for you Kathleen! Can’t wait to see a video. With sound I hope- I’m such a geek, I know it’ll make my heart tremble!

Nicole Marie
March 18th, 2008
10:57 AM

Personaly I always hated gerber, dont know why. But I have to admit it is a good way to get exact and very compleat patterns. I give u props K. for taking the leap and learning, its not an easy thing to do, ( it took me 3 CAD classes to finally master the thing myself), I’d love to see more pic.s of the pattern and finished product.

Yoram
March 19th, 2008
7:49 AM

Hi Alan,

OptiTex can send a direct plot/cut file to to any Gerber or Lectra machines. through a set of converters, OptiTex can also read all Lectra/Gerber files.

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