3DPrinting
3DPrinting is a place where makers of all skill levels and walks of life can learn about and discuss 3D printing and development of 3D printed parts and devices.
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I mean for me they were already off the table with their proprietary bullshit overpriced replacement parts. Yeah sure, it prints more out-of-the-box but once you're used to a little maintenance other printers even cheap ones just are easier. Trivial maintenance and you can get 3-4 for the price of one Bambu usually, which more than offsets the speed.
The left hand giveth, and the right hand taketh away.
My next printer is a Prusa One. Because Prusa. I've watched all the videos on 'why Bamboo', and the bias in all of them is people who are running or want to run a business/farm. While that's a good selection for people who actually use the machines, what is different is how they process costs and inconvenience - because its a business, they can pass costs down to their customers, they can just as a couple reviewers said, "just buy another printer and keep moving".
This is not my use case. I'm looking for a tool for my house/life. It's more like buying a pedestal table saw, or a complete set of cordless tools, a lawn tractor or a small pickup truck. I'm the end customer. I can't 'pass on maintenance costs'. I want a well-made tool that I can happily use for a long long time.
Between the products is not a heck of a lot of difference, they both ooze plastic. Between the two business philosophies, miles and miles. And I can't say I don't want to live in a world filled with bad business philosophies, and then give those same people my business, because they have a cheaper sticker.
I don't buy devices that aren't mine anymore. And it while it often initially costs more, over life, will cost me less - in money, in time, in aggravation.
What would you recommend?
I was planning on Bambu because of perfect prints without any tuning, heated bed, enclosure, and multi material.
Anything under $2k.
This is what people are doing without any post processing :
There are no noticeable layer lines. It's almost resin quality.
that is more editing and good lighting.
there are always layer lines.
Depending on you I would recommend
Voron (DIY, will take about a week to build and a week to tune),
Prusa (depends on your preference, assemble yourself or built, depending on required time a mk4s with mmu3, or the core one which will take several months to get to you, and the mmu3 later when it will become compatible)
Qidi (cheap, chinese, will likely work decent after some tuning)
Sovol is another option, decent quality out of the box and their corexy units are stupid fast.