"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
When locking in are you doing the front and back switches the same time or one before the other. It shouldn't but it can make a difference I have seen and experienced myself
Quote from: brandon on August 22, 2019, 11:22:50 PMWhen locking in are you doing the front and back switches the same time or one before the other. It shouldn't but it can make a difference I have seen and experienced myselfHi Brandon, we do both switches at the same time. Diamondback got side clamps
One trick I found that works sometimes is to lock the frame in, then bring the manual knobs down until they are almost touching the metal bars that lock the screen in. Leave just enough distance so that when you unlock the frame it just barely moves in and out of the screen clamps. I find that the shorter the distance the locking bars travel, the less the screen likes to shift. When the bars are all the way up they hit the frames a little more aggressively and make the frame more prone to jumping around. Not a perfect solution but it does seem to help.
Wow, it's crazy how such a thin piece makes the difference. I'd mark which screens give you trouble going forward to see if they're the culprit as well.
Need to get the frame holders leveled out again for sure. My diamondback is awful about this. Always has been.