Cutting Plotter Kh-720 |work| (2025)
| Feature | KH-720 | USCutter MH-721 | Graphtec CE7000-40 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Cutting width | 720mm | 720mm | 400mm | | Max force | 500gf | 350gf | 450gf | | Optical mark sensor | Yes (laser) | Yes (infrared) | Yes (camera-based) | | Tangential emulation | No | No | Yes | | Price tier (USD) | $450–600 | $500–700 | $1,800+ | | Warranty | 1 year | 2 years | 3 years |
The KH-720 competes aggressively on price. Its 500gf downforce exceeds many rivals, making it suitable for with thick carriers and even light magnetic sheeting. The trade-off is noise: at 400 mm/s, the KH-720 produces 72 dB (similar to a vacuum cleaner), while a Graphtec runs at 58 dB. cutting plotter kh-720
When the KH-720 finally reached the end of its life—a quiet seizure of motors that no amount of oil could fix—Eli held a small closing ritual. He removed the blade, cleaned the rails, and placed the last sheet of vinyl—a flock of tiny silhouetted foxes—on top of it, like a folded flag. He left the machine on the bench for a while, letting sunlight cross its grayed metal. Then, carefully, he boxed it. | Feature | KH-720 | USCutter MH-721 |
Unlike lower-tier machines that rely on plastic chassis and friction-based paper feeds, the KH-720 is built around a and a dual-axis stepper motor system . When the KH-720 finally reached the end of
The cutting plotter KH-720 beats budget Chinese clones in build quality and sensor reliability. It cannot match Roland's software ecosystem or resale value, but at roughly one-third the price, the KH-720 offers 90% of the performance for small sign shops.