Back in my day budget 3d printers were made from laser cut plywood, were held together with zip ties, cost upwards of $200, and pumped 3mm ABS filament onto unheated painter’s tape
For $70 bucks that isn’t horrible. It prints decent for the price. I think that as a starter printer for kids or just anyone who doesn’t know how to work a printer it seems decent.
no because its got no levelling, no bed heating, smells horrible because of the fan and the filament if you choose to use whats included and also the axis movers are just bad.
@@OctopusEight It's a beginner's 3D printer, and you're getting a lot for just $70. What do you mean it has no "leveling"? You level the bed the same way you would with an Ender 3. Also, yes, you can upgrade it with a heated bed, and no, it doesn't smell bad-that's just the filament that comes with it.
I went through two of these when the extruder steppers gave out. I learned a lot and made some very good and functional prints. I later realized that I should have written G-code for the leveling process. It’s very difficult to move the unpowered motors. Home, hit the 4 points over the adjustment screws with pauses and then the center. Loop this 3 times or so and you’ll have a perfectly level bed. I enjoyed mine and used it to learn tons.
this could be great for younger kids who may not hold interest very long, works just enough for them to learn the basics and find out if its a hobby they will stick with without hurting the wallet to much
Have you got any tips for dialing it in? I can level the bed fine, but I think my belts may need tightening or something. There's occasionally big layer shifts.
@@rajgill7576 are you printing via USB by any chance? Because I used to get layer shifts when I ran it through a raspberry, I suspected back then that it is because of some issues on the serial port and skipping instructions. Otherwise, I never had issues just printing off an SD card. One thing that you can do I guess is to try to take of the print bed and tighten the belt by pulling it in under by one extra notch, but I would be cautious about over-tightening too, because of the tiny stepper motors. I also on occasion sprayed a bit of silicone lube on the rail rods. I would however not suspect belts initially, because of just how small this mechanism really is on X1. You should be actually able to apply a small amount of force with the printer turned off and see if the belts skip. But really small amount of force, just enough to get the steppers moving, because they have nylon gears as far as I'm aware.
@sedlja4605 I've been off SD card only. Seems to only be 1 axis. Haven't been printing lately as it needs some major TLC and im looking to get a bambu mini soon :D
@@SkyfighterZX Asides from the extruder cover clips breaking off and needing to tape it on, no. Only needed to tighten the bed belt after several years by one notch. HOWEVER, with cheap devices like this I would not give a lot of value to individual accounts because the QA could be both here and there and another unit could be completely different from qualitative stance. However, back when I got mine, $99 was super cheap and was totally worth it. I really just wanted to get a start in the hobby and just didn't feel like I could justify $200 or more at that time. So it really depends on your situation. Honestly, today its probably better to start out with some cheap Ender. I'm running Sovol SV03 now, but I'm keeping my X1 in its OG box for when my son reaches appropriate age to get it as a cool educational toy.
I got one of the bigger models, worked great! still have it- but you will out grow it fast. If you take care of it, it will surprise you with how long it last and how well it actually works.
As you mention in the end, this isn't a printer for someone who is new to the hobby, this is a printer for someone who is already good at it and wants to bring new people in. It's small and light enough to be easily portable and makes good enough prints to be perfect to show off in fares or schools
Crazy. I remember when we got a 3d printer in our HS computer lab, maybe 10 years ago now. The stuff it put out was about as good as what you got from that little thing and I guarantee they paid more than $70 lol. Glad to see this tech is progressing nicely.
@@rajgill7576 I don't think i changed any stock Cura settings maybe retraction lowered i can't remember. it's so slow to begin with it just works fine.
A department at my work got one of these. There’s a disposable part on the refer units they work on that are cheap plastic and cost $7 a piece. They use this thing and that’s all it does….print that one piece. Sometimes big money isn’t needed for small simple jobs
do keep in mind no heated bed so it will only print pla. if you want a cheap printer that can print petg after $30 of upgrades the ender 3 has you covered. anyone with an alen key and fine flathead can do it. everyone has both.
As a speaker about the 3D print market, and working with 3D Printers since the year 2000 I must say I love this tiny thing. It fits perfectly in my backpack, does what one expected from it: to show how a 3D Printer works. Longevity is a concern since it is my third Easythreed, once all parts to repair are more expensive than a new printer. Take a look to what Thomas Salander made with one of those on his channel
I got an EasyThreeD K9 for free a couple of days ago. I've had a FlashForge printer for about 4 months now, so I'm not new to 3D printing. Even with that in mind, I'm having a lot of fun with the cheap boi. It's taught me a lot about 3D printing and how it works (it is basically just an intricate hot glue gun that you can control with G-Code after all), and I would have happily bought it myself for around $70 bucks just to have a printer to tinker around with, since my FlashForge runs itself very well.
i got my son the x1 for he's birthday he was 13 and wanted to try it but i did not want to spend the money out and get him a ender 3 pro same as mine and i have to say for the money it seems a very good printer for someone who is just starting
I bought a broken 2000 euro printer for just 50 euro, and after I clean’t the printer it just works I put filament in, and it printed without a problem. Now I have a 2000 euro printer for just 50 euro
It is a fun printer if you just want to print small things with a child. Or if you need a Example printer for a 3D workshop that prints Dummies/benchies nonstop. having the slicer include a script that it also pushes off the print, and restarts itself.
I bought one to use when not home as I have a Anet A8. Slow. Crappy prints. The X & Z axis wobble and need to be firmed up. Do not level it at the corners, go in about 3/4 inch. Spend a few more bucks and get a full size one with a display and real control panel, like a Ender 3 when on sale.
This is one of those printers that's perfect and literally not for anybody getting into 3D printing at the same time. 70 bucks is not that much money to drop on a hobby if you're really wanting to get into it. Then you have to learn how to use it which will teach you fundamentals basically of any printer. Leveling, slicing, etc. But, the qualm to this whole thing. That printer requires some know-how to get that to work perfectly fine. A buddy of mine has that printer and he says you have to either replace the bed sheet or start your prints too low which causes elephant footing. For trinkets is a fun little printer.
For me, I first got started with 3D printers with a creality ender 3 max neo. Damn thing had so many issues I had to send it back. Got a Prusa Mini+ instead and had a pretty good experience. Once you get the Z-offset correct it makes for a great and reliable printer. Now, I have a Prusa MK4. Great printer, though I have some stringing issues on some models a little more so than the mini and its harder to tune and maintain. For my money, the Prusa Mini is where its at for an entry level printer. Maybe that Bambu A1 too, though I have never tried one.
Got a similar story with a Anet A9 [got it discounted for like 60 euros after all coupons on aliexpress some years ago during the Anet sale period], it failed due some weird reason, where it cannot extrude anything. {Nozzle isn't clogged. it might be that the heater element is busted/broken, or some other issues. since the temp sensor does show a high temp to print.}
I’d just like to share my experience with 3d printing, I am still very new to this and got in through the Bambu lab a1 mini, if you can get it on sale like I did it costs about £170 which is a lot more but it is so beginner friendly, and upgradeable that I don’t think the x1 would now be a good option for what you could have that lasts a lot longer and is just better in every way for £100 more
i've been using my X1 for a few years now... helped me to get started into 3d Printing. Right now i have a heavily moded X1 with a V6 Hotend, NEMA Motors etc... it turned into a very decent printer. I've gotta say.... i wouldn't recomend it to anyone over a cheap Ender 3 you can get for $99. Its a fun TOY but that is what it is... a toy
I have a K9 printer it cost me 100€ but to be honest for a beginer like me its fit very well. I bought it for introduce myself on a 3d pinters world. I had printed many things with a 3d pen before having a 3d printer. Now I want to buy a bigger 3d printer. The only incovenience with this printer its you will need to chage the extruder affter less than one year of use but i dont know if this is really an issue or not. And by the other hand you should change the original pei plate because its rough and filament will stuck in the holes. I would like to buy other pei with smoother surface and adapt it to my printer.
What’s the best 3D modelling software hehe trying to get into 3D printing not using this one in vid don’t worry I just don’t know what to model in or where to find models
Just got this printer for my 10yr old. Looks decent enough! Do you happen to have a link to the file of the ring-thingy you printed on the 3 printers? Thanks.
I was thinking of getting into 3D Printing custom old-school Beyblade parts since it's my current hyperfixation, and getting to 3D Print anime recreations and replacement parts would be so much fun, but I'm not sure if it'd worth it, so this might actually be a good investment
Nice review, but you can get used 3d printers like Wanhao i3 duplicator with heated bed and much greater print volume for even less. Is this cheapest printer still better than old wanhao i3 duplicator or similar much more solidly constructed printers?
To see it some basic tuning and calibration would be nice. Most of what we print fits on that bed. Can you run octoprint or klipper on it? For $70 might be worth it.
this is an ancient design that has been around for a while (probably 6+ years by now). It works, sure, but you can get ender 3s for only $30 more in some cases - which run miles around this printer. and atleast the ender 3 has some resell value if you deside not to persue 3d printing. Dont get the X1
Im a broke college kid and my old printrbot simple metal broke after 5 years. I had basically no budget but found a ender 3 on sale for not much more than this. Imo theres no reason not to do the same
@@khamismuniru5188 I got it on sale when they were doing tech days on amazon, but I think I've heard people on the forums talk about websites that consistently have them for under 150.
I don't know man. Not saying the price is unreasonable for what you're getting, but this is more a toy than a tool. Like you mention, you can get a solid modern printer for between $150 and $200 these days and that'll be a machine that'll actually last you a long time. If you run into a lot of frustrations with this thing, you might bounce off 3d printing entirely even though it wasn't a very representative experience.
I dont agree, this is a bad 3d printer for a beginner because when they try to print complicated models they are going to get very frustrated and since its an uncommon machine with no community behind it they are going to have to figure everything out on there own. If they want to use a different slicer they are likely going to have to create custom profiles which they wont be comfortable doing. If this was my first printer it might have been my last. Just wait for a sale if you have little money
i got one of these some years back and was surprised how well it performed for its price, it even did a benchy well. surface quality isnt its strong point, but structural prints its fine with.
Back in my day budget 3d printers were made from laser cut plywood, were held together with zip ties, cost upwards of $200, and pumped 3mm ABS filament onto unheated painter’s tape
And the best part is you aren't even overexaggerating here.
@@Luka1180 yes why would he be?
@@7d4ngwdym why
@@penguinooguy why would he lie about using plywood with painters tape and 2.85mm abs?
For $70 bucks that isn’t horrible. It prints decent for the price. I think that as a starter printer for kids or just anyone who doesn’t know how to work a printer it seems decent.
But how long? What it do after one month?
Just buy a refurbished elegoo Neptune for 120 bucks, that thing is made of proper steel.
@@SadCatStudio.I found a $30 one on Amazon🤯
no because its got no levelling, no bed heating, smells horrible because of the fan and the filament if you choose to use whats included and also the axis movers are just bad.
@@OctopusEight It's a beginner's 3D printer, and you're getting a lot for just $70. What do you mean it has no "leveling"? You level the bed the same way you would with an Ender 3. Also, yes, you can upgrade it with a heated bed, and no, it doesn't smell bad-that's just the filament that comes with it.
I went through two of these when the extruder steppers gave out. I learned a lot and made some very good and functional prints. I later realized that I should have written G-code for the leveling process. It’s very difficult to move the unpowered motors. Home, hit the 4 points over the adjustment screws with pauses and then the center. Loop this 3 times or so and you’ll have a perfectly level bed. I enjoyed mine and used it to learn tons.
hi, do you mind to share your settings?
this could be great for younger kids who may not hold interest very long, works just enough for them to learn the basics and find out if its a hobby they will stick with without hurting the wallet to much
I have it too. Took a really long time to dial in, is slow, but it is an absolute beast for what is essentially a child educational toy.
Have you got any tips for dialing it in? I can level the bed fine, but I think my belts may need tightening or something. There's occasionally big layer shifts.
@@rajgill7576 are you printing via USB by any chance? Because I used to get layer shifts when I ran it through a raspberry, I suspected back then that it is because of some issues on the serial port and skipping instructions.
Otherwise, I never had issues just printing off an SD card.
One thing that you can do I guess is to try to take of the print bed and tighten the belt by pulling it in under by one extra notch, but I would be cautious about over-tightening too, because of the tiny stepper motors. I also on occasion sprayed a bit of silicone lube on the rail rods.
I would however not suspect belts initially, because of just how small this mechanism really is on X1. You should be actually able to apply a small amount of force with the printer turned off and see if the belts skip. But really small amount of force, just enough to get the steppers moving, because they have nylon gears as far as I'm aware.
@sedlja4605 I've been off SD card only. Seems to only be 1 axis. Haven't been printing lately as it needs some major TLC and im looking to get a bambu mini soon :D
Hey there, i've heard complaints about durability with these small printers, do you still have yours? any major issues?
@@SkyfighterZX Asides from the extruder cover clips breaking off and needing to tape it on, no. Only needed to tighten the bed belt after several years by one notch. HOWEVER, with cheap devices like this I would not give a lot of value to individual accounts because the QA could be both here and there and another unit could be completely different from qualitative stance.
However, back when I got mine, $99 was super cheap and was totally worth it. I really just wanted to get a start in the hobby and just didn't feel like I could justify $200 or more at that time. So it really depends on your situation. Honestly, today its probably better to start out with some cheap Ender.
I'm running Sovol SV03 now, but I'm keeping my X1 in its OG box for when my son reaches appropriate age to get it as a cool educational toy.
I got one of the bigger models, worked great! still have it- but you will out grow it fast. If you take care of it, it will surprise you with how long it last and how well it actually works.
70$? That’s crazy seeing that you can find an ender3 for $100 at micro center
Yeah but you can't make so much views with a good and cheap printer it's need to be crappy
please note that micro center is in America only and don't do international
@@thelastsoulllll And hyper regional like they don't exist in Florida but do in Goergia for example.
@@lil_Hannah420 To be fair the X1 worked out of the box and the ender 3 normally doesn't unless you are an expert.
@@thelastsoulllll I saw Ender (not sure if Ender 3 or 2) listings in online retailers in Poland and it was for pretty much equivalent price.
As you mention in the end, this isn't a printer for someone who is new to the hobby, this is a printer for someone who is already good at it and wants to bring new people in. It's small and light enough to be easily portable and makes good enough prints to be perfect to show off in fares or schools
Crazy. I remember when we got a 3d printer in our HS computer lab, maybe 10 years ago now. The stuff it put out was about as good as what you got from that little thing and I guarantee they paid more than $70 lol. Glad to see this tech is progressing nicely.
I have one. It's a TPU monster. All i ever use it for. If you update the firmware you can use it with octoprint. Works great.
This is brilliant, we use octo for our Prusa’s! What flex do you use?
Yo. Do you gotta change any settings for TPU? And are there any easy software things I should be doing to help it print?
@@rajgill7576 I don't think i changed any stock Cura settings maybe retraction lowered i can't remember. it's so slow to begin with it just works fine.
Exactly what I have seen in other videos. PLA sorta works fine, but it is the perfect cheap workhorse for TPU because of the DD extruder.
A department at my work got one of these. There’s a disposable part on the refer units they work on that are cheap plastic and cost $7 a piece. They use this thing and that’s all it does….print that one piece. Sometimes big money isn’t needed for small simple jobs
That $70 has saved them hundreds
@@ValTek_Armory basically yeah it saved them a bundle on part, shipping, and never have to play the availability game.
That worked better out of the box than my ender 3 did. Not sure if you can tinker with it like you can with the ender 3 though.
You know its good when the slicer is made in unity
This aged like milk
@@romanshorif2330 yes indeed
do keep in mind no heated bed so it will only print pla. if you want a cheap printer that can print petg after $30 of upgrades the ender 3 has you covered. anyone with an alen key and fine flathead can do it. everyone has both.
Honestly this would be a perfect printer for a kid. I'd be STOKED to get this as a birthday present at age 12 or something like that haha
As a speaker about the 3D print market, and working with 3D Printers since the year 2000 I must say I love this tiny thing. It fits perfectly in my backpack, does what one expected from it: to show how a 3D Printer works. Longevity is a concern since it is my third Easythreed, once all parts to repair are more expensive than a new printer. Take a look to what Thomas Salander made with one of those on his channel
$70 I got the ender 3v2 for $100 and love it almost every print has been flawless (I’m also new to printing )
I got an EasyThreeD K9 for free a couple of days ago. I've had a FlashForge printer for about 4 months now, so I'm not new to 3D printing. Even with that in mind, I'm having a lot of fun with the cheap boi. It's taught me a lot about 3D printing and how it works (it is basically just an intricate hot glue gun that you can control with G-Code after all), and I would have happily bought it myself for around $70 bucks just to have a printer to tinker around with, since my FlashForge runs itself very well.
Ummm….. that’s the printer that I have…
Same
Sorry that you have to suffer
I feel sad you have to suffer such a fate
I can’t believe how well it performed. Especially in your tolerance test.
Was really impressed! Can’t believe it really got the price!
@@playconveyoris there a stl for the test?
i got my son the x1 for he's birthday he was 13 and wanted to try it but i did not want to spend the money out and get him a ender 3 pro same as mine and i have to say for the money it seems a very good printer for someone who is just starting
I bought a broken 2000 euro printer for just 50 euro, and after I clean’t the printer it just works I put filament in, and it printed without a problem. Now I have a 2000 euro printer for just 50 euro
My current 3d printer is the easythreed K8 and it’s also my first. The print quality is…. Alright but it’s soooooo slow.
I want to get one just to convert it to klipper for the fun of it. Maybe even make it able to print with abs by adding a heated bed.
It is a fun printer if you just want to print small things with a child.
Or if you need a Example printer for a 3D workshop that prints Dummies/benchies nonstop. having the slicer include a script that it also pushes off the print, and restarts itself.
I set up a small box fan next to mine that I had and it made cooling work fine.
This printer is the cutest! I want one 🥹
It will take pride of place in my workshop 😁
I bought one to use when not home as I have a Anet A8. Slow. Crappy prints. The X & Z axis wobble and need to be firmed up. Do not level it at the corners, go in about 3/4 inch. Spend a few more bucks and get a full size one with a display and real control panel, like a Ender 3 when on sale.
I really love this 3d printer! The instructions were a bit hard to follow but I got it to work!
This is one of those printers that's perfect and literally not for anybody getting into 3D printing at the same time. 70 bucks is not that much money to drop on a hobby if you're really wanting to get into it. Then you have to learn how to use it which will teach you fundamentals basically of any printer. Leveling, slicing, etc. But, the qualm to this whole thing. That printer requires some know-how to get that to work perfectly fine. A buddy of mine has that printer and he says you have to either replace the bed sheet or start your prints too low which causes elephant footing. For trinkets is a fun little printer.
For me, I first got started with 3D printers with a creality ender 3 max neo. Damn thing had so many issues I had to send it back. Got a Prusa Mini+ instead and had a pretty good experience. Once you get the Z-offset correct it makes for a great and reliable printer. Now, I have a Prusa MK4. Great printer, though I have some stringing issues on some models a little more so than the mini and its harder to tune and maintain. For my money, the Prusa Mini is where its at for an entry level printer. Maybe that Bambu A1 too, though I have never tried one.
I also got a Prusa MINI+ as my first printer. I really loved it. I've since added a MK3S+ to my collection.
Got a similar story with a Anet A9 [got it discounted for like 60 euros after all coupons on aliexpress some years ago during the Anet sale period], it failed due some weird reason, where it cannot extrude anything.
{Nozzle isn't clogged. it might be that the heater element is busted/broken, or some other issues. since the temp sensor does show a high temp to print.}
I’d just like to share my experience with 3d printing, I am still very new to this and got in through the Bambu lab a1 mini, if you can get it on sale like I did it costs about £170 which is a lot more but it is so beginner friendly, and upgradeable that I don’t think the x1 would now be a good option for what you could have that lasts a lot longer and is just better in every way for £100 more
This actually looks decent. I got my sv06+ today and it was definitely a learning experience
i've been using my X1 for a few years now... helped me to get started into 3d Printing. Right now i have a heavily moded X1 with a V6 Hotend, NEMA Motors etc... it turned into a very decent printer. I've gotta say.... i wouldn't recomend it to anyone over a cheap Ender 3 you can get for $99. Its a fun TOY but that is what it is... a toy
i bought Easythreed X1 few years ago and i still have it but i have a new one which is Anycubic Kobra
I jus5 got the x2 with heated bed for $74 lol. Thing actually prints decent
Good for the RV or boat.
For 150 GBP (250 CAD) I got a Kobra 2 Neo a week ago. Fantastic printer for only twice the cost.
Good review. Thanks for the info!
I have a K9 printer it cost me 100€ but to be honest for a beginer like me its fit very well. I bought it for introduce myself on a 3d pinters world. I had printed many things with a 3d pen before having a 3d printer. Now I want to buy a bigger 3d printer. The only incovenience with this printer its you will need to chage the extruder affter less than one year of use but i dont know if this is really an issue or not. And by the other hand you should change the original pei plate because its rough and filament will stuck in the holes. I would like to buy other pei with smoother surface and adapt it to my printer.
The slicer being made in unity is wild
Where can I buy this and more string for printing?
$70 is not a bad price. I'm more interested as it runs off 12v. There's one now that's $96 at Walmart. I might get one to set up in my motorhome.
4:07 the slicer is made... In Unity...? What :D
I have the same before i bought tronxy, i surprised it is not that bad if you know how to print with it.
If you put it inside the bambu enclosure can it print CF nylons?
It likely can't print anything but the basics.
Maximum temperature is 230C and I doubt the nozzle is hardened, not a chance. PLA and TPU is about all you'll be printing.
What’s the best 3D modelling software hehe trying to get into 3D printing not using this one in vid don’t worry I just don’t know what to model in or where to find models
tbh, the cute little X1 is not bad, if i was a kid and was interested in 3d printing, i would probably buy it from money i saved up, cutting lawn.
I bet the quality would be improved majorly by using a decent slicer.
Im subrised that this video has only 100 likes, deserves more
Thanks 😊
Just got this printer for my 10yr old. Looks decent enough! Do you happen to have a link to the file of the ring-thingy you printed on the 3 printers? Thanks.
I was thinking of getting into 3D Printing custom old-school Beyblade parts since it's my current hyperfixation, and getting to 3D Print anime recreations and replacement parts would be so much fun, but I'm not sure if it'd worth it, so this might actually be a good investment
Finally. An X1 in my price range 😤
Nice review, but you can get used 3d printers like Wanhao i3 duplicator with heated bed and much greater print volume for even less. Is this cheapest printer still better than old wanhao i3 duplicator or similar much more solidly constructed printers?
To see it some basic tuning and calibration would be nice. Most of what we print fits on that bed. Can you run octoprint or klipper on it? For $70 might be worth it.
I have the K7 and run the Mintion Beaglecam on it. Not my only printer, but I do like it.
I wonder if you can print an articulated dragon on it?
Why the nozzle should be exposed only a little?
this is an ancient design that has been around for a while (probably 6+ years by now). It works, sure, but you can get ender 3s for only $30 more in some cases - which run miles around this printer. and atleast the ender 3 has some resell value if you deside not to persue 3d printing. Dont get the X1
You can get used enders 3 pro, which is even better and more economical option
How does the bambu compare to a voron?
Fun fact: The cheapest 3D pens cost around 50 cents.
Ok if you click backwards before the video begins you can make him jump XD
Im a broke college kid and my old printrbot simple metal broke after 5 years. I had basically no budget but found a ender 3 on sale for not much more than this. Imo theres no reason not to do the same
Hello fellow broke college kid, where can I buy an ender 3 for cheap?😃
@@khamismuniru5188 I got it on sale when they were doing tech days on amazon, but I think I've heard people on the forums talk about websites that consistently have them for under 150.
So are we going to talk about the fact that he tightened the bolts with pliers whilst assembling??
you didn't mention, but it is direct drive and can print flexibles!
Please give me the stl file 🙏
wich printer would u recommend maximum price 400€? as beginner
> literally weighs nothing
> box comes back down
pick one
Hey im trying to get my first 3d printer and i have around 300 bucks do you have any recommendations
Is that a non-removable nozzle?
if it works, it'd be perfect for school project.
Is it possible to use a tablet to use printer
definitely looks like a good printer to get young kids started wit
I found a $30 one on Amazon I'm 🤯🤯🤯
Cool Video
1 2usd fan, would make it 100% better
Omg please run PET filament through it, to see if it can melt it
Elegoo literally was selling a printer for 50 bucks a few months ago
works better then my ender 3 pro
I don't know man. Not saying the price is unreasonable for what you're getting, but this is more a toy than a tool. Like you mention, you can get a solid modern printer for between $150 and $200 these days and that'll be a machine that'll actually last you a long time. If you run into a lot of frustrations with this thing, you might bounce off 3d printing entirely even though it wasn't a very representative experience.
I mean I've seen the ender 3 go for just about a hundred bucks many times now. Personally I just don't think there's a place for this printer.
Hey 70 dollars that’s good considering me a child with an allowance am trying to buy my own
i bought a 2nd hand printer that only cost 35$ and update the firmware still works better than this cheap so called hundred dollar printers
Temu has a £30 one
Is good but easythred k7 is good
How can it be so well packaged and everything but so bad and cheap?
I just want to see this running klipper just for the lols.
$70??!? I found this exact printer on TEMU for $13.48!
What's a "vissfing?"
I dont agree, this is a bad 3d printer for a beginner because when they try to print complicated models they are going to get very frustrated and since its an uncommon machine with no community behind it they are going to have to figure everything out on there own. If they want to use a different slicer they are likely going to have to create custom profiles which they wont be comfortable doing. If this was my first printer it might have been my last. Just wait for a sale if you have little money
i think its just the ppl it aims dont know how to set up a printer so the leveling must be horrible thats why it doesnt stick x)
i really want the carbon but its too expensive for me😂
If you live anywhere near a Microcenter, the Ender 3 V2 is only $100.
i got one of these some years back and was surprised how well it performed for its price, it even did a benchy well. surface quality isnt its strong point, but structural prints its fine with.
Chould it do warhammer 🤔
Or buy a Bambu A1 Mini for 299 and have linear rails and light years better print quality.
On god
I litterally got an used kobra for 60€💀
I'll stick with my Ender 3 V2 that I bought for $99, on sale. 😂
link pz
4:49 Hydrogen bomb vs coughing baby
Prints better than an Ender 3 😂
Oh, heck no it dosent. I would never be able to print a light switch cover on my Easythreed
Aint gotta pay more than 100$ for a printer