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Interesting product, good review!

I can understand the point about why cardboard would not work due to thickness.  I'm a bit curious if the backing is also too thick to transmit light well.

While it would make the sign tooling a bit more complicated, one path might be to make a slot on one end of the frame that the ads could be slid in and out of to let them be more easily changeable.

Of course for the reasonable price point, the point of the multiple stickers is probably not to be changing them often (though it didn't look too hard to peel the one off), just to make it flexible so the user can pick what sign they want one time during install rather than offering a whole bunch of different billboards.

-Dave

Big Jim posted:
jini5 posted:
riki posted:

Why not just get thin plexiglass and stick them on that. Make a clip to hold them next to frame.

 

How about saran wrap or even wax paper

It is obvious that you have never been in a kitchen or anywhere near a roll of saran wrap or tried to look through wax paper.

I might just try pieces of clear binder plastic and a tiny dab of rubber cement on each corner. 

I'm considering buying one of these billboards but I'm thinking it's large in scale next to other buildings, in my case the York Hotel.   I could create artwork to advertise the hotel as a stay destination for the TCA meets.  I have a small space in the front of the hotel for a taxi/arrival scene and maybe some ad space.  The screen must be around 7 inches wide ?  My York Hotel is located next to Fenway Park so it doesn't look out-of-place scale wise.   So I have a geographical issue but it makes a short trip to the ballgame after the train show.  Besides, it's the only place on the layout that the hotel would fit.

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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