Did the original problem have anything to do with the switch not turning?
If you had both the cylinder and the switch out at the same time I would guess that it is possible that the rod shifted and is now out of sync. You probably noticed the little rack and pinion arrangement that controls the rod movement and I am assuming that could get out of whack if the end of the rod was not anchored. I did my cylinder and switch one at a time and didn't pay that much attention to how that all engaged.
Hopefully someone else can offer some help.
If you had both the cylinder and the switch out at the same time I would guess that it is possible that the rod shifted and is now out of sync. You probably noticed the little rack and pinion arrangement that controls the rod movement and I am assuming that could get out of whack if the end of the rod was not anchored. I did my cylinder and switch one at a time and didn't pay that much attention to how that all engaged.
Hopefully someone else can offer some help.