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Setting the Z home at precisely zero (at the  board surface) is very important, because we are working at depths of hundredths of an inch. After several attempts I don't think you can do this well with just the manual jog, and risk breaking the tool. Here's what I did that worked:
Setting the Z home at precisely zero (at the  board surface) is very important, because we are working at depths of hundredths of an inch. After several attempts I don't think you can do this well with just the manual jog, and risk breaking the tool. Here's what I did that worked:


# Raise the head so you can put the tool in the collet. Put it in as far as you can.
* Drop the head to about 1/2 an inch above the workpiece
# Tighten gently, only enough to keep from falling out.
* Loosen the mill tool in the collet
# Drop the head to about 1/4 an inch above the workpiece. Don't touch!
* GENTLY let the mill tool drop to touch the workpiece surface
# Loosen the mill tool in the collet
* finger-tighten the collet as tight as you can
# GENTLY let the mill tool drop to touch the workpiece surface
* Home the Z axis
# finger-tighten the collet -- tightly!
* Raise the head and wrench-tighten the collet
# Home the Z axis VERY IMPORTANT DON'T FORGET!!
# Raise the head and wrench-tighten the collet


I think the default Z Down dimension of -0.01 may be too much given that 1-oz copper is supposed to be only 1.4 mils thick (0.0014 inches). I've had good results with -0.008; .0.005 led to problems because I think the PCB I used was not perfectly flat at at some  places this depth did not hit "bottom." With further experiments this may be because the clamps are compressing the PCB: at least it seemed to work fine more than 1/2 inch away from them.
I think the default Z Down dimension of -0.01 may be too much given that 1-oz copper is supposed to be only 1.4 mils thick (0.0014 inches). I've had good results with -0.008; .0.005 led to problems because I think the PCB I used was not perfectly flat at at some  places this depth did not hit "bottom." With further experiments this may be because the clamps are compressing the PCB: at least it seemed to work fine more than 1/2 inch away from them.
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