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Having owned a Silhouette cutter, I think you went a better route. The plotter cutters cut curves as short straight lines instead of a fluid curve. Even if the laser cutter acts the same way, at least the curves with your hobby knife which you'll use to cut from the laser template will be actual curves. The sharper the curve, the more this matters.
I have old Graphtec Craft ROBO cutter, and while it is true that since it is a stepper-motor-based cutter/plotter, I have not seen any noticeable stepping in curved cuts. I believe its resolution is 300 steps/inch.I still say, if you have access to it, give it a try. It would sure save you a lot of stencil cutting time. Also,with 1/8" thick acrylic you will have to make sure to get the knife right to the inside edge of the stencil for accurate cuts.Your artwork will have to be in vector format, but since you are planning on using a laser cutter, it likely is in vector format.
Excellent! Give it a try Craig. BTW, what software did you use to design those masks?Also, if the craft cutter you will use can hold a pen instead of a blade (like mine does) so it can be used as a plotter, instead of wasting the adhesive sheets it would make sense to do a test plot to see how well the masks fit the cars
Aaaaaand a final variant of which they most recently took delivery of which has the larger windows and also a unique truck design.
Well, those trucks look like European ones. The trucks on this Swiss coach look very similar.https://www.fleischmann.de/fen/products/coaches-and-wagons/passenger-coaches/890321-1st-class-passenger-coach-with-service-compartment-sbb.html
They were built by Stadler Rail in Switzerland, thats why the trucks look European.