Hi folks!
I've been 'tinkering' around with a Zenbot 4896 I bought a year or so ago and recently developed a problem I can't quite figure out and thought I'd run it by some people who undoubtedly know more about it than I do. I've been trying to learn just by reading and working but can't quite understand what's going on with this one.

I'm building cabinets, they're about 20X24X28 or something to that effect, and the two opposite sides are basically identical in profile size. So two sets of two sides. There are also some blocks, etc. cut out on a 48X96 sheet in various places on the sheet, basically one large file that cuts out at once and then you put everything together.

I started noticing the belts were sagging on the X axis, especially with the heat this summer. I'm only cutting on this thing maybe 7 or 8 hours a month, so this problem didn't develop until the heat, which might be related.

So I start having an issue where the sides are cutting at different sizes on the X axis (96 axis). The Y axis is pretty much always perfect. So if the part is in the middle third of the sheet, it will be the correct X length. If the part is in the 1st third, or the last third, it will be too long, by about half an inch. This is pretty severe when you're trying to make mirrored cabinet sides.

There is a strange area in the middle of the sheet where if I put a block say 3X5, and one right next to it, one will cut 3X5 and the one right next to it will cut 3X5.25. I have no clue how that's possible.

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This is all laid out in V Carve Pro, and then exported with mach 3 arcs inches as the post processor. I'm running at 100ipm and it has the old school Metabo router on it. Router speed is about 15000rpm. Cutting depth is about .14"

The problem is getting worse, it was always doing it but before in the winter months, it was more like 1/16" off so it wasn't that big of a deal. Now it's half an inch off, and I THOUGHT it was the belts.

So today I researched it, figured out how to tension those belts, and then more importantly, how to calibrate Mach III. Boy I was sure I had it, the X axis was off about an inch from one end to the other, so I used the auto calibrate setting in Mach 3 and got that sucker where it's perfect. I mean you can go 96" and it stops exactly at 96". I also did the Y axis, everything is lined up, the belts have no slack, etc.

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Cut another sheet... and..... it's exactly the same. The parts in the middle seem correct, if they're on the first third of the sheet they're too long if they're on the last third of the sheet they're too long, still by about 1/2". Rechecking the file in V Carve pro and everything is identical and laid out perfect size, and if I export another G code and then compare the text in the .txt file they are identical to the file that doesn't cut right. If I run the file through the preview in V Carve Pro, everything comes out the right size, and I ran the file through an online simulator and everything came out square and correct.... so I'm left thinking it's a hardware problem. This is only on the X/A axis, the Y axis is always fine. If I run the router down the table to any spot on the X axis, and then measure, it is always in the correct spot (but I can't do this while it's cutting)

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Here's what I'm leaning towards:

A. It could be the Gecko drive for the X axis, possibly. Or the A axis, which is on the other side of the gantry and is a slave to the X (somehow)

B. It could be the X or A motor itself

C. It could be the belts although they look fine...

D. It could be something with the A, when I zero Mach III I have no "A" axis even shown, and I always zero the X, I have no clue what is even turning the A or how that's setup, it just plugs into the Gecko.


Any thoughts? Thank you for reading my book!