
Should i have come up from the bottom with a smaller screw and washer to just catch the lip of the damper and attach it to the frame?
Sigh! Oh well, going to have to wait till the weekend to fix it anyway - got too much going on this week. (And probably need to pick up some shorter screws.)sthone wrote:Yeah I don't think you are suppose to compress the rubber that will probably affect the dampening. I think you are only suppose to use two short screws to affix the damper to the frame and not completely through to the motor. Basically you will have two unused holes on the motor, as well as two on the frame. It will still probably damper the sound the way you did it but not as much because at that point you are almost making it ridged again.
-Steve
It should have come with the screws you needed?Jules wrote:Sigh! Oh well, going to have to wait till the weekend to fix it anyway - got too much going on this week. (And probably need to pick up some shorter screws.)sthone wrote:Yeah I don't think you are suppose to compress the rubber that will probably affect the dampening. I think you are only suppose to use two short screws to affix the damper to the frame and not completely through to the motor. Basically you will have two unused holes on the motor, as well as two on the frame. It will still probably damper the sound the way you did it but not as much because at that point you are almost making it ridged again.
-Steve
Thanks!
Nope, no screws. Had to forage amongst my bits and pieces that came with the machine and hit the hardware store. Twice, because it took a longer screw on the Y-axis than the m3x16s that i got.insta wrote: It should have come with the screws you needed?
I think you're probably in for a surprise now with how much quieter it's going to get.
Thanks! My niece! She's marrying a very fine young man! (Super tall too!)jsc wrote:Congratulations to the lucky bride or groom.