Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
You could use a stiff paint remover blade the one with a handle, it has a sharp edge and you can start on one corner and just work your way underneath the rubber.
This worked well for us a few times...Use a manual press flash. Leave the flash above the platen, wait awhile, and the adhesive should get hot enough to peel off the rubber. We then used some solvent to get the access adhesive off of the aluminum.
Quote from: im_mcguire on November 08, 2017, 01:51:56 PMThis worked well for us a few times...Use a manual press flash. Leave the flash above the platen, wait awhile, and the adhesive should get hot enough to peel off the rubber. We then used some solvent to get the access adhesive off of the aluminum.This method works very well rubber gets big bubbles and browns like a marshmallow , my printers like to practice this method every once and a while