a Bambu Labs compatible heat sink, an E3D V6 ring heater, and a heat break assembly are required
a fan was sacrificed to mount a Big Tree Tech control board. Most everything ended up connecting to the new board without issue, except for the extruder.
made a custom mount for the ubiquitous Orbiter extruder.
The whole project was nicely tied up with a custom-made screen mount.
So, other than the enclosure and print bed, what’s actually left of the original printer? It seems like the way to get a Bambu printer to run FOSS is to open the box from Bambu Labs, toss everything inside the box in the trash, drop a custom built printer in the box, and then proceed with your unboxing.
ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
Does bambu labs core customer demographic really give a shit about the openness of their printers though? It seems pretty obvious they’re not targeting the 3D printer enthusiast but rather makers that just want a tool that works without any fuss.
AZX3RIC@lemmy.world 23 hours ago
That is exactly why I bought an A1 Mini when it came out after tinkering with an Ender 3 clone for years.
My only concern now, that I didn’t think about when I bought it, is what happens when they stop supporting it?
Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works 22 hours ago
You will buy a new one sheep.
-sincerely Bambu Labs
SebaDC@discuss.tchncs.de 22 hours ago
Kind of the same for me. My hobby became a business and I need to ensure that it will survive whatever enshitification they do.
Currently have 1 printer X1 carbon, and I will get a competing product next year.