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Should the hobby continue to be about both the act of printing and tinkering with printers, or is there a reasonable place for people who want “3D printing” as a hobby but not “3D printers” as a hobby. As part of this, is it okay for a company to lock down its firmware and prevent people from using their printer over a network without going through their software first?
Bambu Lab has made remarkable progress in “mainstreaming” 3D printing but they’ve done so at the expense of a lot of the “soul” of the space. Unlike many of their consumer-facing predecessors and competitors, they are closed-source and proprietary. They make a good product, but you don’t get to have control over it the same way you do with other brands. And that just means other brands are likely to follow suit, now that Bambu Lab has shown it to be an effective strategy.
I mourn the loss of common purpose the hobby once had, but at the same time I do think it’s a natural progression for something new and complex to eventually become consumer-grade. Look at how computers have evolved into rectangles we keep in our pockets.
I have it deliniated into 3d printing hobbieiests and 3d printer hobbieiests. Printing people are about what the printer makes Printer people are about building and making the printer do more and more.
I want the printing to be the hobby, not the printer, but I also don't want the consumer-hostile stuff that Bambu is doing to spread.
I'm stuck with an A1 mini and don't know where to go from here. I'm not an engineer and haven't had much luck designing anything more complex than a single static part, and I think you really have to be good at making your own stuff for a printer to be a good purchase. But at the same time I'd really like more than a 7x7x7 inch build volume.
It really depends on what you want to use it for. I have the skills to make decently complicated parts to print, but 9 times out of 10 I'll just see if someone has already made something similar and use that instead. If you know you're gonna be prototyping a bunch of things or testing weird shit out then yeah you should probably know how to operate a CAD program, but if your use case is, "this plastic thing on my very common appliance broke, I wonder if I can print a replacement?" or "these little flexible dragon things are cute" then you just need to know how to use a search bar and your slicer.
I've designed a few things, like these pill bottle holders.
I've also "reverse engineered" (It's literally just a wedge) a doorstop that works surprisingly well. I keep misplacing ours at work.
Those simple designs are the foundation of the more complex ones you will create in the future. If you have need and determination, you can design anything!
I keep falling out of the hobby because I don't want a printer to be my hobby - I want printing to be my hobby. But no matter how many times I try to pick it back up, my printer never produces a good print.
I'm on the other end of the swing again - looking for tuning tutorials to help get my cr10 printing well. I am very open to suggestions.
I do like tinkering with the printer, and I do want that control, but eventually it gets to a point where I just want it to work
Come join us in the resin printing world!
I think it's like cars for car guys vs cars for people who just want to get from place to place. I started with Elegoo and got really sick of all the fiddling it took to get a decent print. I got a Bambu and it just works. I know it's a "walled garden" but in the end I can print whatever model I want and it comes out great most of the time.