![]() We ran the CN74 program to calibrate the clip locations. The guy who sold it to me (and delivered it) helped me set it up. Took me a couple of months to get things ironed out and fully operational to where it now purrs along very nicely. I ran my PRSAlpha from 2009 until last year without an ATC and then got the ATC. ![]() I can't stress enough how vital this initial alignment is. If you don't have the instructions for a full ATC alignment, ask the Shopbot folks and they can walk you thru the whole thing. Everything runs of proximity switches with the ATC, especially the Z proximity switch. You have to make sure all the other alignment routines are run successfully first, because all the ATC code uses these routines to determine where it is in the world. Zzero reference was the toughest for me to get my head around. All of a sudden zero references are very different. This is something I struggled with when I added an ATC to my machine. Using an ATC is very different from a machine that does not have an ATC. Since you just got this machine and are new to ATC operations, I would suggest running the entire course of alignment routines. After running C73, I have to MZ to the thickness of my material and then do a ZZ to set my zzero reference. I use Shopbot Link which throws a lot of other wrenches into the smooth running gears. If I'm going to be referencing the surface of the spoilboard as my zzero, I C73. ![]() If I am referancing the top of the material for my Zzero, I run C2 to zzero. When I start each day, I run C3 to align on 3 axis. Have you run the C72 on all your tools since you set up? Tis is vital to all the values being correct. ![]()
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