The Vinyl was produced in the United Kingdom, but was shipped to another country.
8-Track Tapes and Cassette Tapes were in between Vinyl and CDs. So there was no real transition from Vinyl to CD. Vinyls have never stopped being produced.
Vehicle wraps appear to be painted on but they are usually made of adhesive backed vinyl. When the vinyl has been applied to the vehicle it can be moved around.
If you are talking about vinyl as in someone saying "I love that song, I have it on vinyl", then it is a record pressed on a vinyl material. It is also called an album or an LP (long playing). Vinyl records stopped being produced after the invention of 8-track tapes, cassette tapes, CDs and DVDs. They can still be played today on a record player or turntable attached to the stereo system.
A Roland vinyl cutter can be purchased from companies such as Lovecut. It can also be purchased on eBay. There i a good selection of cutters produced by Roland which is highly regarded as a manufacturer.
Yes, there are varieties depending on how the banner is produced. For instance, vinyl banners can be digitally printed or screenprinted. They can even be hand-painted, though this is rare now that printing is common and cheap.
Vinyl records were produced long before 8 track tapes were made.
Vinyl records replaced shellac records, which were heavier and costlier to produce. The record player was a more durable, portable version of the Edison Cylinder, which was the first mass-produced recorded audio format.
No They produced tons of them
Vinyl seats? Vinyl roof? Vinyl dash pad? Vinyl door panel?
Depends on condition, of the records and the buyer. I'd guess not much more that about $2.50 each, there were so many produced....
10 GA vinyl is thicker than 6GA vinyl. The higher the gauge the thicker the vinyl.