The new Creality K2 is in the same class as the Bambu X1C (but is not a beginner machine) but I think the A1 or A1 mini are both perfect for beginners. Very easy to work on and switch out parts. Good sale right now tooanything wrong with Creality for a first-timer who will absolutely nerd out on the details and minutiae?
or is Bambu recommended for entry level?
any real differences?
these appear to be standalone machines but i'm assuming to get started you need filament, nozzles, etc.The new Creality K2 is in the same class as the Bambu X1C (but is not a beginner machine) but I think the A1 or A1 mini are both perfect for beginners. Very easy to work on and switch out parts. Good sale right now too
I do not recommend any other Creality printers after using an Ender years ago. They’re really slow (2x slower than an A1 at least) and don’t have automatic leveling so you have to level before every print manually…. It’s a pain in the butt.
Bambu actually has all the stuff you need in the box and some replacements as well. A1 came with a 0.4mm nozzle, 2 replacement filament cutters, a blade to use in a bed scraper you can print, oil, lubricant, and screwdrivers for assembly/repairs that actually don't suck. Probably like 4 other things I forgot to.these appear to be standalone machines but i'm assuming to get started you need filament, nozzles, etc.
is there a basic starter kit you would recommend? things you would want out of the box that aren't included so i'm not handing over a gift with a requirement to spend another $400 on the necessary materials just to tinker with the first time. rather just knock it all out up front and present a fully usable present.
Yeah I had a crash that pissed me off on a big print I was setting up.These recent Bambu Lab updates to 1.10 and 1.10.1 as of this morning has unfortunately been crashing occasionally for me.
Holy crap this looks amazing at $1199 (or $949 as a kit).
A shame that their multi-color device (MMU3) is kinda rudimentary and takes up a lot of space but they will likely upgrade that later.
Very competitive entry from the EU though. I think this is the first ever consumer-level enclosed Prusa printer (they've sold enclosures but never combined the two peanut butter jelly style).
Seeing these guys in the Czech Republic actually being able to compete with the cheap labor of China really gives me a lot of hope that someone will eventually step up a competitor domestically. I looked into that once and everything is twice the price and basically a Prusa MK3 clone at the moment (without the reliability)Bambu has been great at getting them to step it up.
We have the MK3 and Mini at work and they have been workhorses for us. Unfortunately the Bambu is much faster.Seeing these guys in the Czech Republic actually being able to compete with the cheap labor of China really gives me a lot of hope that someone will eventually step up a competitor domestically. I looked into that once and everything is twice the price and basically a Prusa MK3 clone at the moment (without the reliability)
Ugh I wish this was out last week so I could have added it to my last order. I have a lot of tiny Christmas trees to make in the next month.Bambu just released their PLA wood series: https://store.bambulab.com/products...EFQT&sc_llid=187521&sc_customer=6700678119560
Do those lines exist when you slice the model? I ask because they're all the same place:


