Comment on Bambu Lab announces the Vortek H2C, an automatic nozzle-changing version of the H2D
kurushimi@sh.itjust.works 1 day agoA level headed take on Bambu identifying positives and negatives? I must be reading the wrong community.
Comment on Bambu Lab announces the Vortek H2C, an automatic nozzle-changing version of the H2D
kurushimi@sh.itjust.works 1 day agoA level headed take on Bambu identifying positives and negatives? I must be reading the wrong community.
nullroot@lemmy.world 12 hours ago
A1 mini was my first printer and it just worked. It made my foray into 3d printing smooth and enjoyable. I keep it offline now and I’ve registered complaints with Bambu about them walling off their garden. I will unlikely be buying another Bambu machine, but I like the one I’ve got.
kurushimi@sh.itjust.works 10 hours ago
Yep, for me my first printer was a Prusa MK3S+. At the time it was definitely the sort of experience you just described, and I jumped on the Prusa Enclosure upgrade to enable ABS. But there were some maintenance frustrations nevertheless that prompted me to get a backup printer.
I went with an Ender 3 V2, and my god that gave me the whole “literally doesn’t work out of the box, buy this mandatory set of aftermarket upgrades and enjoy your continuous maintenance trap” experience.
Never again. I sold that and grabbed an X1C which became my main printer with the Prusa as the backup.
I totally appreciate the value of open source; Linux built my career and I’ve lived and breathed it and the OSS community for the better part of two decades. I also totally appreciate and respect folks who take joy in tinkering with and maintaining their hardware. I’m just not that guy anymore and I’ve transitioned into the “wanting things to just work” phase for most things.
To me, if we can have both closed source options and open source options competing and each surviving — to me similar to say MacOS and Linux — then everyone can benefit; there’s a solution for everyone.