Paper cutters - Just purchased a rotatrim professional 24"

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kieranmullen:
Does anyone else have one?  is the plastic guide bar supposed to be flush with the metal edge?  I notice it sits back a bit.

BrianPrice:
Kieran

The guide sits one or two millimeters  back, I presume to allow you to see the cutting edge better.
You won't find a better trimmer anywhere - we replaced ours last year after 20 years of heavy professional use and they were still working, just looking a bit tatty and squeaking a bit (like me).

Brian

kieranmullen:
Thanks. I took of the extra metal bar for fear that would scratch up the prints. ~$310 but I used the ebay and msn cashback so I should get at least 24.80 back + 1% from credit card. So if you have no white space between prints, what is the best way to align the cut?  Perhaps there is a way I can align my prints with just a smidge of a white line to cut on?  so a sheet of 8x10's 3 across (24" printer) would just have a white border on them?

BrianPrice:
Kieran

After a few goes you will be able to judge exactly where the cut is - the metal cutting edge is a good guide. You can also line up the back edge of the print with the 8" mark on the side ruler. The metal bit is useful for trimming large numbers of individual prints.

Brian

Seth:
My Dahle trimmer does the same thing.  Plastic edge is back from the metal.  Probably to keep reall fine paper from building up.

Anyway, it takes a while to figure where the cut is.  A light table under it would be convenient.  I use a strip of white paper or mat board under the edge to see it better.

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