Back in 2018 I bought an Ender 3 and over the years after a lot of tinkering and upgrading I got really sick of having to work on it, so I shelved it permanently a few years ago. I didn’t have very much I wanted to print by then anyway, and another print failure that resulted in a giant ball of plastic covering the hotend for the umpteenth time tipped me over the edge. I could only disassemble it for service so many times before I started wanting to give it the Office Space treatment.

But now I would like to start printing again, only this time I want to actually just print things and not feel like an unpaid 3D printer mechanic. I don’t need anything fancy, I’m still only going to print ~95% PLA with the occasional PETG or ASA maybe. Really all I want is the equivalent of an Ender 3 only reliable, quiet, and with auto bed levelling (also having an actually flat bed to start with would be nice). Any kind of mandatory (or pseudo-mandatory via arbitrary feature-lock) cloud connectivity is a hard no from me. I will use Octoprint to manage it.

Are there any cheap printers that fill that role these days? I’m well and truly OOTL

  • neinhorn@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    If don’t care about open source or that you’re locked into a vendor specific slicer. The A-series from Bambu labs is a very good turn key printer.

    If you care about the specifics of open source or how your print gets sent to the printer, then I suggest looking somewhere else.

    • punkfungus@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      2 months ago

      Of course that’s a thing now. Yeah I would very much not like to be locked into a vendor ecosystem.

    • daannii@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Started with ender 3 v3. Constant tinkering

      Got a bambu A1 year later. Won’t go back to anything creality makes ever.

      A1 just works.

      Replacement parts are similar prices as generic parts for the ender.

      So I don’t care if it’s all proprietary. It all works. And you don’t need to deconstruct it to get it to work.

    • aloofPenguin@piefed.world
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      2 months ago

      I’d also recommend the A series (I got recommended the A1 from a friend when I was starting out), and it’s been pretty great so far. As for the slicers, I know you can use OrcaSlicer with Bambu printers (as well as with a ton of others too)