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- #11
W. Fisher
Printer Guru
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- Aug 13, 2015
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- Epsons, Canons, Brother.
I would suggest, whatever you do, to free the working area as much as possible - You must see the problem and make the right decision on what and how to do the gluing. Tools not to forget. Coffee breaks and thinking helps.
Anyhow - if You intended to change the printing head - You should perhaps do more dissembling than this.
In this Youtube film I see a aluminum bar behind the print head.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sSQbhQbEvd8
I presume that the thingy you are going to glue is under that bar. It seems as there some screws on top of that bar.
Could You study them and try to loosen them to come into/near Your working area for gluing?
AND - if it's there - changing just the print head does not help Your problem - You must then mend that part anyhow! So do not change print head until You have studied and solved what that thingy does and how it's mounted.
Edit: I see that it's the carriage to be switched. It seems anyhow that the bar I talked about above hinder the access to the working area.
I see that gray bar around 5:30 mark that shows a couple of screws in it on top of the carriage area, although the parts manual shows five screws holding it on in total. I think that's what goes on top of the part that broke off. Must be some sort of slide for the top part of the carriage that slides beneath it. The white gear must link up to all those gears on the right panel side for something. Why it has a spring holding it down, unless it is some sort of brake to keep it from freely turning, I don't know. Seems it pushed the black broken piece up and away from the carriage and maybe why it busted off. Dunno.
What he shows taking 9-10 minutes seems more like a full day or two. He does get brutal with the ribbon cables around the print head when he takes it out. The carriage looks like more has to be dismantled on the right side for it to come off the lower chrome rails too. Maybe the entire capping station comes off.
Given how far he takes it, don't know if I'd trust gluing it back together verses the new carriage. Might glue the old one as a backup in case this happens again and stick the new on in.
Anyhoo, looks like lotsa fun! (NOT!)
W.F.