Recommended 3d printer models?
Recommended 3d printer models?
If you have the money I’ve had nothing but good experiences with Prusa, and I had tons of bad experiences with the cheap printers I had before.
I can only speak directly to their bed slingers, but if I was buying today I’d probably get their new coreXY model.
Not all cheap is bad, im a proud owner of an lk5 pro that refuses to die for nearly 3 years now. Print quality equal to an ender 3 i’d say.
But in all honesty, it may be durable but not as easy to upgrade than the popular ones.
The Prusa One and Bamboo X1 are very equivalent printers: both are high print quality, low intervention crazy fast, and more beginner friendly than anything that has come before. The Bamboo will (currently) do better with multicolor (with an addon unit) and Prusa is more trusted (there’s a threat that Bamboo will go closed-ecosystem).
I’d recommend watching some of the reviews from bigger names in the 3D printing world. I don’t remember who specifically has done reviews and comparisons of the two, but safe bets are Thomas Sanladerer / Made With Layers, CNC Kitchen, and 3D Printing Nerd.
If you are willing to spend the money, I would recommend getting a Prusa. They are pretty good with keeping their system open (although not everything is open source, you can read about it here), their printers print well and their support is very good, which is nice, especially as a beginner. I would recommend buying a kit and building the printer yourself if possible, it’s a lot of fun imo and also helps if you need to troubleshoot something later because you already know how the printer works. The Core One is their newest model, it’s a bit faster than the MK4S and fully enclosed, so its easier to print more technical materials on it. It has a bit of a wait time on the order tho and still needs some firmware patches to be as reliable as the MK4S and it has no support for multi material printing yet. I think it will probably be quieter than the MK4S if/when it gets a phase stepping update and you can easily put a filter on it if you want to print some of the more nasty materials.
The MK4S is also still a good option imo if you plan to mostly stick to using PLA and PETG.
I don’t think the Mini is worth it at the moment unless you can get one used, and the XL is massive overkill if you are just starting.
If you don’t want to spend as much, Sovol is one of the better Chinese manufacturers when it comes to respecting open source and not having shitty apps full of ads afaik, but I don’t have any personal experience with them. Aurora Tech is a good source for detailed printer reviews on Youtube, in addition to the channels mentioned by Derek.
After several years of development, complicated by the pandemic, disrupted supply chains, and war in Europe, we announced our new Original Prusa MK4 today. We began shipping the first units of the XL two weeks ago. There is an upcoming PrusaSlicer...
I just got my Core One last week (also first time buyer), and my first impressions are very good.
ETA: I got a lot of helpful comments in a thread I posted last year: lemmy.ml/post/23563961
I’ve been waiting to finish up with some major life stuff before diving into the world of 3D printers. Now that is finally behind me, and I am currently trying to find out which printer I want so that I can place an order. So far I’ve set my eyes on the new Prusa CORE One. It ticks a lot of the boxes that I think I am after, including: - As open as I can get (before going into that Voron-stuff, which I think I’m not ready for). I don’t want to be bogged down with having to run proprietary slicers through Wine and things like that. I am not sure how big of an issue that is with e.g. Bambu or Creality (if at all), but I’ve seen enough rug-pulls and enshittification processes that I don’t really want to risk that. I want to be sure that I can use FOSS tools such as Blender and FreeCAD for design, and similarly open slicers, and the whole workflow will work just fine. - As future-proof as I can possibly hope for. I think the upgrade path from the MK4 to CORE One shows that they are serious about sustainability and longevity of their devices, and as far as I can tell, I should have no troubles sourcing replacement parts. I also want to support companies with this philosophy. - Has a decent print volume (I know there are bigger, maybe I will be constrained by this at some point?) - Enclosed - a major reason I did not want the MK4S was that it was not enclosed (but maybe you can get an enclosure?). It will be placed in my study where I spend most of my computer time (which often times is a lot, so I imagine I will be in the room while it is printing). I imagine, with the additional filter, that it will be better with an enclosure. Also, it will be easier to keep good temperature control during prints, as it can get cold here during winter. - Locally produced (I’m EU based). I understand that other manufacturers provide more “bang for the buck” and that I in that sense will be overpaying feature-wise. I am fine with that given my emphasis on the above criteria. However, I am a complete newbie to 3D-printing. I am sure there are some limitations I have not thought about, and I was wondering if there are any major things I have not thought about that would actually affect me negatively and should make me reconsider this model?
(if you have pets, buy an enclosed one)
Interesting point.
I didn’t get a Bambu printer because of the price or design, I got it because of its “just works” reputation, which it does.
Unless Qidi matches that ease, it isn’t equivalent, and that’s important to mention. Maybe it does?
And yeah, I don’t love the recent changes, but that’s only ideologically. Practically speaking it is still amazing.
That’s what I thought too at first, then I forgot the door open once when I went to the toilet and when I came back I found one of my cats very closeling inspecting the moving toolhead heated up at 200°C pushing out molten plastic
And it’s still annoying to clean the printer before each use
Is the hobby printing, or what you want to do with the print?
This was the question posed to me, and I went with the latter which lead me to Bambulabs (pre-shenanigans).
A 3D printer is a tool first and foremost.
These days outside of poorly designed fire hazards any model you can get will be good.
For my two cents avoid the following traps.
all plastic construction. Looks nice but assume you will need to service it at some point.
no spare parts available. Basically go on Amazon and type “print bed for model of printer” and if you find nothing it’s not getting parts or service.
What to get then. Brands are fickle so these are the features I look for.
thermal run away protection. If it doesn’t have the run away yourself.
heated bed. Helps with adhesion
removable build plate. Easy service and since the build plate is consumable good to have
auto bed leveling. It’s not 2018 and manual leveling is a waste of time.
direct drive extruders. Bowden isn’t bad but if you want consistency direct drive really helps
Brands I would recommend is Creatily since it’s a good budget machine (do research first their naming is crap) and Prusa since most machines are based off of theirs.
A1 bambu
I originally had a enderr 3 v3
I will say I learned how to replace virtually every part and how to make custom parts to fix design flaws
But no. I would not recommend it.
I got the A1 bambu. It just works.
Bambulab slicer is based on prusa but has more features like the plate one I mentioned. I also think it’s more user friendly.
I do agree. Printer should be choose based on other factors but the slicer is just the cherry.
Bambu printers are excellent.
They are especially great for newbies. They just work. No tinkering. No replacing parts every few months.
They also print faster and at a higher quality.
One printer that isn’t mentioned as much is the Qidi Q1 Pro, which looks like a killer value.
I personally have an A1 because it was really cheap in my region, but Bambu has done a bunch of anti-competitive things by blocking third-party software, so if I had to start over, I would get something else.
Other good options I think would be the Ender 3 V3, Sovol SV06, and maybe even a Prusa MK4S if it’s within your budget. The cheaper printers are perfectly fine though.