info@1clickprint.com
01909 561888

Flowing Again: Replacing Your Capping Station Pump

If you’ve run a “Head Clean” in your BYHX software and the ink is just sitting in the capping station like a stagnant puddle, your pump has likely given up the ghost. In the DTF world, the pump is the “plumbing” of the machine—it provides the suction needed to pull fresh ink through the head and clear out the “gunk.”

Most of our machines use a peristaltic pump. These are clever little devices that use rollers to “squeeze” a silicone tube, creating a vacuum without the ink ever touching the mechanical parts of the motor. However, those tubes eventually perish or the motor stalls. Here is how to swap one out without making a right mess of your workshop.


1. Identifying the Failure

Before you start pulling the machine apart, perform the “Flood Test”:

  1. Move the carriage out of the way using the maintenance position in BYHX.

  2. Drop a small amount of cleaning solution into the capping station with a syringe.

  3. Run a “Cleaning” cycle.

  4. If the liquid doesn’t move, or you hear a grinding noise from the back of the machine, the pump is either blocked or dead.


2. Preparation: Safety and Spills

  1. Power Down: Switch off at the mains and pull the plug. You’ll be working near the mainboard area, and you don’t want any stray drips of ink causing a short.

  2. Clear the Area: Have your 1ClickPrint Isopropanol wipes and some blue roll ready. Ink will inevitably leak from the tubes when you disconnect them.

  3. Access: Depending on your model (42cm or 60cm), the pump is usually tucked away behind a side panel near the waste ink bottle or directly under the capping station assembly.


3. The “Plumbing”: Disconnecting the Old Pump

A peristaltic pump has two ends: the Intake (pulling from the cap) and the Outlet (pushing to the waste bottle).

  1. Trace the Lines: Follow the tube from the bottom of your capping station to the pump. Mark this tube with a bit of tape as “IN.”

  2. Unplug the Motor: Trace the wires from the pump motor to the board. It’s usually a small 2-pin JST connector. Unplug it gently—don’t yank the wires.

  3. The Swap: Undo the mounting screws holding the pump housing to the frame. Carefully pull the tubes off the “barbed” plastic connectors.

    • Pro Tip: Use a 1ClickPrint wipe to immediately wrap the ends of the disconnected tubes. This stops ink from siphoning out onto your floor while you’re mid-swap.


4. Installing the New Pump

  1. Direction Matters: Look at the new pump. There is usually an arrow indicating the direction of flow. Ensure the “Intake” side is connected to the tube coming from the capping station.

  2. Secure the Tubes: Push the tubes firmly onto the barbs. If the tubes feel a bit loose or “baggy,” you can use a small cable tie (zip tie) to ensure an airtight seal. A vacuum leak here is just as bad as a dead pump.

  3. Mounting: Screw the pump back into the frame. Ensure the silicone tubing inside the pump housing isn’t pinched or kinked—it needs a clear “U” shape to work properly.

  4. Electrical: Plug the motor back into the board.


5. The “Prime” and Test

Once everything is back together, you need to get the air out of the lines.

  1. Initial Prime: Before turning the machine on, you can use a syringe to manually pull some ink through the lines from the waste-bottle end. This “primes” the pump and proves the seal is tight.

  2. Software Test: Power up and open BYHX. Use the “Pump” or “Clean” function.

  3. The Final Check: Drop some cleaning solution into the cap again. If the pump is working correctly, you should see the liquid disappear instantly as the rollers turn.


Maintenance Schedule

Component Frequency Action
Pump Tubing 6 Months Check for “flat spots” or cracking in the silicone.
Waste Bottle Daily Don’t let it get too full; back-pressure can damage the pump.

Summary

Replacing a pump is a bit “faffy,” but it’s a straightforward mechanical job. Keeping the “plumbing” of your machine clear is essential—if the pump can’t pull, the head can’t stay clean.

About the author

Jamie Turner has spent more than two decades at the sharp end of the print industry. As the driving force behind 1ClickPrint and DTF-Printers.co.uk, he has navigated the sector’s transition from traditional digital methods into the high-growth world of Direct-to-Film technology. A familiar voice in the trade, Jamie is a frequent contributor to leading printing magazines, where his insights and columns have helped shape the conversation on hardware reliability and production efficiency where his focus is on the nuts and bolts of what makes a print business actually profitable. Through this site, Jamie shares the hard-won expertise gained from 20 years on the shop floor and in the boardroom. He remains dedicated to demystifying new tech and providing the honest, technical guidance that printers need to stay ahead. When he isn’t testing the latest machinery, you’ll usually find him advocating for better standards, lower costs and innovation across the UK print trade.