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Cleaning your pasta machine is really very easy. It does not have to be totally disassembled. It only takes the removal of 3 screws and 2 nuts to get it apart enough to clean. Once you have your tools in hand and are sitting down ready to work, you can have it apart in less than 1 minute. Really!
Materials and Tools | Disassembly | Cleaning | Reassembly | Tightening Loose Rods
Materials and Tools:
- Paper towels
- #1 (small point) Phillips Head Screwdriver

- #2 (regular point) Phillips Head Screwdriver
- 10mm wrench or nutdriver, any type. An adjustable wrench will work but is more difficult to use.
Optional:
Directions:
Disassembly
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Because some of the fasteners may be fairly tight, I prefer to hold the pasta machine between my legs for the next few steps.
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Use your 10mm wrench and loosen (counterclockwise) the two nuts. Only loosen them about 1 or 2 turns each, do not remove them just yet. This keeps pieces from falling off unexpectedly.
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Go ahead and put the pasta machine back on the table, again with the thickness adjuster side down.
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Use your fingers to remove the two nuts from the threaded rods now. Put them aside.
Cleaning
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Okay, we've got it as far apart as it needs to be. See? Wasn't that easy? Come on, lets get this thing cleaned up!.
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If your pasta machine still has them, now remove the two top covers. (the U-shaped long things, I'm holding one...) One or both might still be with the rest of the machine, just pull them out and put them aside. We normally do not put these back, because they can snag the clay and stuff can build up inside them. They probably serve some important function for pasta, but they just get in the way for clay use.
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Okay, what's left? Lets have a look at the scraper blades. That's where clay builds up and is the main problem spot if the pasta machine is performing poorly.
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Oh. My. Goodness!
No wonder we're cleaning this thing!
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... and get rid of any built up clay. If the clay has been in there a long time and has gotten hard and dry, or if there is just a whole lot of it, as in this case, you may need to use something like the knife to scrape it out. Note - Be careful not to nick the thin edge of the blade with the knife (or yourself for that matter...) it needs to be smooth and straight to work properly.

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After they are clean, carefully inspect the scraper blades edges for straightness. This isn't much of a picture, but at the tip of the arrow you can see this one is bent from having so much clay wadded up behind it. Trouble is, once it gets a nick, or a little bent, it scoops up more clay, which bends it more, which makes it scoop up more clay, which bends it more, which... I think you know where I'm going with this... The blade needs to be as straight as possible so it can contact the roller equally along it's entire length after reassembly. I use my fingers to bend it back as straight as I can, which has been sufficient for us so far.
Reassembly
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Put the sideplate on gently. First start the bigger roller end throught the plastic hole, then wiggle and get the two threaded rods started through, then the remaining roller end. Don't worry about the blades just yet.
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Working on the bottom of the pasta machine again, place the footplate back on the base, align the holes in the footplate, base and sideplate and insert the screws. Tighten the screws.
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Now it's time to flip the machine back onto its side and tighten the two nuts. As I mentioned during disassembly, once in a while the rod will spin with the nuts when you try to tighten them, it means two nuts inside the other side of the machine aren't tight enough.   You'll need to tighten them as described here before you can finish reassembling the machine.   Again, this only happens once in a while, and once tightened properly will not need to be done again.
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