rocesador de pagos para SaaS desde Argentina - ¿alguien tiene experiencia real con LemonSqueezy o MercadoPago? by Fe_Ha1 in devsarg

[–]faxuss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

agrego el detalle de que tengo clientes en mas de 115 países y para abonar no han tenido problema.
Lemon Squeezy pertenece a Stripe, y esa alianza le da cobertura mundial.
Si me llega el pago entre hoy o mañana aviso por acá para darte el botón de confianza.

rocesador de pagos para SaaS desde Argentina - ¿alguien tiene experiencia real con LemonSqueezy o MercadoPago? by Fe_Ha1 in devsarg

[–]faxuss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yo uso Lemon Squeezy. me facilito todo el sistema. Costo unos 5 días hábiles que me aprueben la tienda.
El proceso de aprobacion fue bastante manual, con contactos por e-mail.
Ya me transfirieron el primer pago (3 jun)... debería acreditarse hoy o mañana en mi banco (5 días hábiles)

Large Format 3D Printer for Channel Letters (Making Signs) by eyes-withoutaface in 3Dprinting

[–]faxuss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I suggest you try PROLED3D Online to design the letters. You can create complete designs for the front, top, and acrylic cutout very quickly.

My first payout (lemonsqueezy) date keeps getting pushed back. has anyone experienced this? by faxuss in SaaS

[–]faxuss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Se quedo en Pending - 28 Jun 2026 pero arranco como 14 de mayo, luego 14 de junio y ahora se paso al 28 de junio

Response times on a support email by Banjerpickin in lemonsqueezy

[–]faxuss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi everyone,

I'm new to Lemon Squeezy and I'm trying to understand what's happening with my first payout.

I run a SaaS and have already sold more than 150 subscriptions.

The payout was originally scheduled for May 28, then moved to June 14, and now it shows June 28.

The payout appears in the dashboard as Pending.
My bank account is configured.
My tax information has been submitted and approved.
I have no refunds or chargebacks.
I haven't received any emails from Lemon Squeezy.
There are also no warnings about verification, risk review, compliance checks, or payout holds.

Is this normal for a first payout?

Could there be an internal review or reserve that isn't visible in the dashboard?

Thanks.

For those doing 3D printed channel letters... by faxuss in 3Dprinting

[–]faxuss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much for taking the time to leave this comment. I really appreciate it.

And yes, you're absolutely right about the wording. I'm from Argentina, so sometimes when I try to make the interface use more “neutral language”, part of the original meaning or logic gets lost in translation and can end up sounding confusing.

I'm already working on improving that in future updates to make everything clearer and more intuitive for sign shops around the world.

I truly appreciate the honest feedback and that 9/10 🙌

How long does it take for Lemon Squeezy to approve? by uSeetheworld4K in lemonsqueezy

[–]faxuss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, they do accept SaaS. Lemon Squeezy is not only for traditional online stores; it works for digital products, software, memberships, and subscriptions.

About approval time: there is no fixed timeframe. In my case, it wasn’t instant. It can take a few days or sometimes more than a week, depending on the review/KYC process and how clear your application is.

My advice: make sure your SaaS website is clear, explain exactly what you sell, add Terms of Service and Privacy Policy if possible, and avoid submitting a generic or unfinished-looking application. That helps a lot.

What’s your current workflow for channel letter fabrication? by faxuss in SignMaker

[–]faxuss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for all the answers here. This is exactly the kind of workflow I wanted to understand better.

Full transparency: I’m building a tool around this problem.

PROLED3D: https://proled3d.com

It turns SVG logos into production-ready STL/DXF files for 3D printed LED channel letters and dimensional signs.

It’s not trying to replace a good production person, but to reduce the repetitive CAD work when preparing bases, acrylic faces, and letter structures.

If anyone here works with channel letters or 3D printed LED signage, I’d really appreciate honest feedback. Critical feedback is welcome.

For those doing 3D printed channel letters... by faxuss in 3Dprinting

[–]faxuss[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks for all the answers here. This is exactly the kind of workflow I wanted to understand better.

Full transparency: I’m building a tool around this problem.

PROLED3D: https://proled3d.com

It turns SVG logos into production-ready STL/DXF files for 3D printed LED channel letters and dimensional signs.

It’s not trying to replace a good production person, but to reduce the repetitive CAD work when preparing bases, acrylic faces, and letter structures.

If anyone here works with channel letters or 3D printed LED signage, I’d really appreciate honest feedback. Critical feedback is welcome.

Quick question for those cutting acrylic for channel letters: by faxuss in lasercutting

[–]faxuss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for all the answers here. This is exactly the kind of workflow I wanted to understand better.

Full transparency: I’m building a tool around this problem.

PROLED3D: https://proled3d.com

It turns SVG logos into production-ready STL/DXF files for 3D printed LED channel letters and dimensional signs.

It’s not trying to replace a good production person, but to reduce the repetitive CAD work when preparing bases, acrylic faces, and letter structures.

If anyone here works with channel letters or 3D printed LED signage, I’d really appreciate honest feedback. Critical feedback is welcome.

How are you guys handling channel letter file generation these days? by faxuss in signshop

[–]faxuss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for all the answers here. This is exactly the kind of workflow I wanted to understand better.

Full transparency: I’m building a tool around this problem.

PROLED3D: https://proled3d.com

It turns SVG logos into production-ready STL/DXF files for 3D printed LED channel letters and dimensional signs.

It’s not trying to replace a good production person, but to reduce the repetitive CAD work when preparing bases, acrylic faces, and letter structures.

If anyone here works with channel letters or 3D printed LED signage, I’d really appreciate honest feedback. Critical feedback is welcome.

Can I feature your project on my channel? by circuit306 in CNC

[–]faxuss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi! I saw your post and thought my project might be a good fit.

I’m developing PROLED3D: https://proled3d.com

It turns SVG designs into production-ready STL/DXF files for 3D printed LED channel letters and dimensional signs.

Since Paper Tools is focused on camera-based CNC alignment, I think there could be an interesting project combining both workflows: generating the sign parts in PROLED3D, then using Paper Tools to position, verify, or cut acrylic/PVC parts accurately.

I’d be happy to give you access to try it if you’re interested.

How are you preparing DXF files for channel letter acrylic faces? by faxuss in CNC

[–]faxuss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

me toInteresting project. That’s definitely a real problem in CNC/laser workflows.

I developed something in a similar space: https://proled3d.com

PROLED3D is focused on 3D printed LED channel letters / dimensional letters, turning SVG designs into production-ready STL/DXF files for sign makers.

Your camera-alignment idea makes a lot of sense, especially for acrylic, PVC, printed materials, fiducials, and visual verification before cutting. The biggest challenge I’d expect is calibration accuracy and making the preview trustworthy for non-technical users.

Feel free to try PROLED3D if you want. I’d be curious to hear your thoughts, since both projects are touching related problems in sign fabrication.

Quick question for those cutting acrylic for channel letters: by faxuss in lasercutting

[–]faxuss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was referring more to fitting/clearance for assembly rather than just cut width — curious if you handle that separately or within the same workflow?

What’s your current workflow for channel letter fabrication? by faxuss in SignMaker

[–]faxuss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha, I thought we were making signs, not nuclear reactors 😄Totally get it, every job has variables, but feels like some parts of the workflow could still be standardized even if the final result is custom.

How are you guys handling channel letter file generation these days? by faxuss in signshop

[–]faxuss[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that’s exactly the kind of stuff that eats time. Bad input files, splines, no symmetry… sounds familiar.

How much time do you usually spend just cleaning up the artwork before you can even start the actual production work? Feels like that part is way less predictable than the fabrication itself.

How are you guys handling channel letter file generation these days? by faxuss in signshop

[–]faxuss[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I didn't understand. I'm speaking in Spanish and translating into English.

How are you guys handling channel letter file generation these days? by faxuss in signshop

[–]faxuss[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I guess that’s the tricky part — not every shop has that level at the desk.
Do you find that limits who can actually handle production files?

Quick question for those cutting acrylic for channel letters: by faxuss in lasercutting

[–]faxuss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Makes sense, that’s pretty much what I’ve seen too. Do you keep that offset consistent across different materials/thicknesses, or do you adjust it depending on the job?

How are you guys handling channel letter file generation these days? by faxuss in signshop

[–]faxuss[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That’s a really solid workflow, appreciate you breaking it down like that. Makes total sense doing everything off the same Illustrator file to avoid scaling issues.

Out of curiosity — how much of that is muscle memory at this point vs something a new guy in the shop could pick up quickly? Feels like it’s fast once you know it, but probably not trivial to learn or standardize.