Bambu Lab Firmware Update Forces Cloud Dependency & User Lock-In - AVOID THEIR 3D PRINTERS!
Bambu Lab Firmware Update Forces Cloud Dependency & User Lock-In - AVOID THEIR 3D PRINTERS!
Bambu Lab Firmware Update Forces Cloud Dependency & User Lock-In - AVOID THEIR 3D PRINTERS!
You're viewing a single thread.
Prusa for the win yet again. I recently upgraded to MK4, and the thing just keeps. On. Going. Great customer support. They work with 3rd party suppiers instead of against them. Worth every cent.
Yep, and the fact you can upgrade to new versions is amazing, only paying for the new parts, not a whole new printer.
I had a side gig as the printer mechanic for a small company that 3D printed bracketry for their product. They used both genuine and "knockoff" (open source ftw) Prusa Mk3s. I'd kinda like to staple Josef Prusa's foreskin to the ceiling. I think it would make him have better ideas than the extruder-and-hot-end-assembly that those machines currently have. Deal breaking issues I've had with them in service:
It's not specific to the Extruder mechanism, but because nothing is connectorized at the business end, you end up having to open the main board's enclosure and dealing with shit in there, and there isn't room. It's turned the wrong way; the connectors and shit should be on the OUTSIDE of the printer so you could get to them easier and most of the cover should hinge or bolt off.
For an 8-bit AVR-based Mendel pattern machine they work surprisingly well when they're in good shape but they are a PAIN IN THE TAINT to keep running in a production environment. I have the skills to do better than this but I'm not doing it for free.
Ouchie. OK, I get all that, not gonna argue.
But I'm in a completely different position as a hobbyist, I have completely different criteria.
Thanks for sharing!
Some of this I think still goes for hobbyists if they plan to buy the printer as a kit. The first (of like, eight) Prusas I built I had a hell of a time assembling the extruder mech because it's not designed to be easy or sane to assemble, I still pinched wires, not bad enough to break anything but still. And I had built several 3D printers and a couple laser engravers prior to this.
And that PINDA probe mount is still hilariously delicate.
As a hobbyist machine that will spend most of its time powered off, they're fine. For their gantry mechanism and the 8-bit control board, they're surprisingly high quality if slightly slow printers.
Oh there's another thing: The Prusa community is in the bad habit of sharing G-Code rather than STLs, because everyone everywhere has the same printer, right?
My personal printer is still my first manually leveled Folger 2020 i3 with some customization of mine, and I don't need another.