Picture 1
Working from left to right, position top run of aluminium angle and secure to wall. Making sure it is level. This aluminium angle is for a 900mm wide sign tray so 3 fixing points will be sufficient as its getting fixed to rendered brickwork. Metal cladding might require more fixing points.
Measure the inside of your sign tray and place bottom run of angle so the tray will fit over the top. The part of the bottom angle fixed to the wall should be pointing upwards toward the top run. For a 900mm deep tray the space between the angles should be approx. 892mm. Take into account the thickness of the angle.
Picture 2 and 3
Place tray over both angles, it should fit nicely without forcing but well enough should it just hang there. However it is necessary to fix the tray to the angle, a 900mm wide sign tray will only need 4 screws (2 in the top and bottom). Drill through the tray and angle; be careful not to damage the tray. Then using a self-tapping screw secure the tray to the angle. You should have been supplied with colour coded screws so they blend in nicely.
Picture 4
This sign has 2 trays so repeat the process of fixing the top run of angle; this is for a tray 2950mm long so more fixing points are required. The trays are going to next to each other so leave about a 10-15mm gap between the fixed tray and the angle so the next sign tray will fit. The sign tray is 700mm deep so a gap between the angles should be about 692mm.
Picture 5 and 6
Place the second tray over the angle and fix with colour coded self-tapping screws. There you go, and nice sign for an enterprise complex. The 2 different sizes of returns (75mm x 50mm) on the tray give the sign an extra depth. On this occasion the customer wanted two signs to grab attention from both directions, making a lovely pair!.