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There is an end-stop switch for the Y direction. Push the head towards the rear of the printer until you hear the switch click. It should happen when the rod hits the switch (sometimes you have the opposite problem where the rod has slid through the sliding blocks and doesn't hit it at all).
Anyway you want that click that you hear to occur another mm or so farther back.
You can try bending the metal part of the switch but you might break it. You can also loosen the 2 screws on the left side of the printer that hold the switch, then slide the switch towards the rear of the printer and retighten. Go easy when retightening - there are no nuts - the threads are self-tapping in the plastic switch housing and it's easy to strip them so go a little easy on the tightening.
Whatever you do, make sure when you push the head to the back of the printer, you still hear the click before the head stops moving.
In the Cura 5.8 stable release, everyone can now tune their Z seams to look better than ever. Method series users get access to new material profiles, and the base Method model now has a printer profile, meaning the whole Method series is now supported in Cura!
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gr5 2,243
You have less Y travel on that machine.
There is an end-stop switch for the Y direction. Push the head towards the rear of the printer until you hear the switch click. It should happen when the rod hits the switch (sometimes you have the opposite problem where the rod has slid through the sliding blocks and doesn't hit it at all).
Anyway you want that click that you hear to occur another mm or so farther back.
You can try bending the metal part of the switch but you might break it. You can also loosen the 2 screws on the left side of the printer that hold the switch, then slide the switch towards the rear of the printer and retighten. Go easy when retightening - there are no nuts - the threads are self-tapping in the plastic switch housing and it's easy to strip them so go a little easy on the tightening.
Whatever you do, make sure when you push the head to the back of the printer, you still hear the click before the head stops moving.
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