Fix Z-Banding and Z-Wobble in 3D Prints
Diagnose by band spacing
Measure the vertical distance between bands. If the bands match the lead screw pitch (often 2 mm or 4 mm on printers with TR8x8 screws), the lead screw is the cause. If they match the layer height pattern, the issue is slicer or print settings.
Cause 1: lead screw wobble
- Loose lead screw at the top: leave it un-constrained at the top (most modern printers do this on purpose)
- Bent lead screw: spin it slowly by hand with the motor disconnected and watch for wobble
- Misaligned coupler between motor and lead screw: loosen the coupler grub screws and let it self-align
Cause 2: dirty or dry lead screw
A lead screw with grit on it or no lubrication binds inconsistently. Wipe the screw clean and apply a light lithium grease or PTFE lube.
Cause 3: V-wheel or linear rail wear
Worn V-wheels or grit in a linear rail let the print head shift sideways under load. Check by pushing the gantry side to side with the motors off; there should be no audible play.
Cause 4: under or over-tightened belts
Loose belts cause ringing and ghosting, which can look like banding. Over-tight belts deform the frame. Belts should pluck like a low guitar note, not a snare drum.
Cause 5: bed not level
If the bed is tilted relative to the gantry, the nozzle squishes hard at one corner and floats at the other. The varying first layer pressure shows up as banding in the early layers. Level the bed.
Slicer-side checks
- Inconsistent extrusion can mimic banding; check for retraction or temp issues
- Variable layer height in some slicers can cause visible bands by design
Browse the range
Whatever the cause, mechanical fixes solve banding before software tweaks. Browse the filament range once your printer is clean.