vladmech,

Got it set up and printed a little trinket I’d made for my wife earlier, that on the CR-10 printed in about 27 minutes; took a flat 13 on the K1 and that was with a very conservative 7500 mm/min. I’m excited to see what this can push up to!

IMALlama,

Ah, yes - the Cartesian to CoreXY swap. At a certain point you might want to consider a bigger nozzle. Yeah, physically moving faster is nice, but being able to go from say 4 walls to 2, while keeping the same wall thickness and without a time hit, is great.

stevehobbes,

Why this over a Bambu?

vladmech,

There was a good sale at Micro Center and I’ve really enjoyed my Creality CR-10 and that was enough to nudge me into the K1 Max.

jaschen,

What did you end up paying?

Outside of price, what features are you getting(or not getting)with this?

I am considering a bamboo 5o replace my artillery X1 and MakerBot x2. I love both my printers, but I’m sick of being a 3D printing engineer and just want to print something out I created.

vladmech,

It was $700 + tax, but in store only, which was an issue since California has one Micro Center and it’s down in the LA area. Luckily my wife was going to Disneyland with some family and ended up being 10 min from the store and was nice enough to snag it for me.

Speed was the biggest feature I was interested in and man this thing hauls, but having a full enclosure to mess with temp sensitive prints is something I’ve been wanting, and the Lidar + print issue detection seems like it’ll be great. And man the bed just leveling itself feels like some wizardry after manually leveling my print bed for so many years.

I have an OctoPi hooked up to my CR-10 but I’ve been fiddling around with the Creality Cloud setup and it looks like I can get the same functionality with one less device, and having the camera built in and web accessible is really cool.

jaschen,

I guess bamboo does not have exclusive to lidar printing now. It’s significantly cheaper than bamboo.

My MakerBot x2 has an enclosure but it only prints ABS. But leveling prints is so annoying.

Too bad I have to make a trip out there to buy it haha. Thanks for the info.

darkstar,

Not OP, but I chose not to go Bambu because of the closed ecosystem. I like that they’re enabling custom firmware now, but they presented as very closed and proprietary, including network printing going through their cloud. While I’m not printing anything sensitive, I could see that being a concern for some, especially if you’re designing your own prints. I get that they’re the turnkey solution that “just works” out of the box, but so do my Qidi X-Plus 3 printers, and I can SSH into them if I want.

tjhart85,
tjhart85 avatar

I've got a Qidi Smart3 and it's made me enjoy 3D printing again!

I've got 3 other printers and they're such a chore, but the Qidi is just a little powerhouse that works fantastically. Qidi needs to come out with competition for the Bambu AMS and they'd have more of my money in a heartbeat.

darkstar,

I would love to do multicolor or multimaterial printing, but there’s no alternative to the AMS right now. I also feel like the “right way” to do this is how the Prusa XL does it, which is multiple extruders. This cuts down significantly on the amount of waste, though the quality of the AMS approach still seems to be better for now. Granted, I haven’t actually needed to print multiple colors or materials yet, so it’s not really a big deal.

itsmect,

I think the choice comes down to what one values more, the AMS or open firmware. I think the AMS is a fantastic addition, not for multi-color printing, but as a convenient and dry storage solution. All cloud features can be disabled, it perfectly works in the local network including live camera feed. You only loose access to the app, which I didn’t want to install to my all foss phone anyway.

The X1 series uses an application processor with linux under the hood, and it was just a matter of time before it got jailbroken. The P1 series on the other hand uses some microcontroller, which can be locked down much better (and thus is not compatible with the new “open” firmware). I’m exited to see where this goes, and will definitely give up my guarantee in exchange for rooting my printer.

Kuro,

That’s the software/firmware side of it but the closeness also applies to all the hardware. If something is broken you can’t get it from another supplier other than Bambu. And even that you have to think about “rooting” your printer is enough to never touch this Eco system. Keep 3D printing open!

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • 3dprinting@lemmy.world
  • rosin
  • thenastyranch
  • ethstaker
  • osvaldo12
  • mdbf
  • DreamBathrooms
  • InstantRegret
  • magazineikmin
  • Youngstown
  • ngwrru68w68
  • slotface
  • GTA5RPClips
  • kavyap
  • cubers
  • JUstTest
  • everett
  • cisconetworking
  • tacticalgear
  • anitta
  • khanakhh
  • normalnudes
  • Durango
  • modclub
  • tester
  • provamag3
  • Leos
  • megavids
  • lostlight
  • All magazines