I’ve been trying to troubleshoot a surface texturing issue for several weeks. I accidentally noticed the pulley had wobble, but thought it was the stepper motor at first. Nope. It’s the pulley.
That sounds about right. QA is expensive and time consuming, so it’s left up to the customer. This applies to every single part in the supply chain.
If you want a set of mitsumi linear rails for real precision applications, it’s going to cost just as much or more than that printer.
This is not a “buyer beware” rant, but the buyer should know they aren’t paying for consistency or precision. I am basically saying that for these printers to work reliably and with proper precision, you need to tear them down yourself and inspect each bolt.
I buy cheap Chinese stuff all the time, but my process is to tear the product down and find where costs were cut and look for any serious dangers.
Svol is well known enough that you should be able to get replacement bits for free. Or not. It’s a crap shoot, TBH.
FireTower@lemmy.world 8 months ago
Wow .26mm of disparity is a lot for such a crucial part. It may not be a high end printer. But seriously? At $280 USD I’d expect the pulley to be tighter tolerance.