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Yeah, I figure that. But I'm in a situation in which, where I live, we don't get most brands and models. Creality was pretty much the first consumer 3D printer brand to enter the local industry by partnering with a few established local tech stores, so they essentially cornered the market. There's more variety now, but a lot of non-Creality printers that normally should be within a reasonable price range, here go from more expensive than they're worth to downright prohibitive.The question is always going to be budget. Practically anything can blow out an ender 3 nowadays, at any price range
Hmm....idk. Is that V3 SE available to you? If so it includes pretty much of of the popular mods people did on their plain ender 3s.Yeah, I figure that. But I'm in a situation in which, where I live, we don't get most brands and models. Creality was pretty much the first consumer 3D printer brand to enter the local industry by partnering with a few established local tech stores, so they essentially cornered the market. There's more variety now, but a lot of non-Creality printers that normally should be within a reasonable price range, here go from more expensive than they're worth to downright prohibitive.
So I'm not sure what kind of budget I'm looking at. I'm thinking mostly of "what's a good machine to step up from the E3, what brands, models, and features should I look for OR avoid, etc", more than looking at the prices.
Still, I'm not gonna get a Bambu Lab P1P any time soon since it's, let's say, SUPER FUCKING EXPENSIVE here.
Not in any local retailer that I could find.Hmm....idk. Is that V3 SE available to you? If so it includes pretty much of of the popular mods people did on their plain ender 3s.
Anywhere, really lol. The basic ender 3 is so incredibly slow and outdated that you could toss a dart at a board blindly and hit something that's significantly better.Not in any local retailer that I could find.
Anyway it's not like I want to buy something right now. I'm just trying to get a sense of where to go once I decide to upgrade.
turning anything into a SKU to sell and support is all part of R&D, even if it's not a mindblowing new product. they also have their own development staff, no matter how valuable anyone considers that. and all their stuff is still open source, I rather not have the chinese corner the market like they did before in other areas (which usually works buy undercutting competition, the price number alone isn't the only factor).R&D? You mean Marketing.
you don't even need a creality for that, you can jerry-rig your own printer with whatever parts you find. but that's now how a business operates, they rather pay premium for stuff that works ootb (and has the support they can scream at) than tinker with till it works or to make it work better. that's also why they pay for service contracts instead of ordering replacements on amazon themselves. or outsource departments and still go with windows instead of linux......what? You can go on Amazon and find probably just about anything to replace on a creality. Bonus points for grabbing spares for cheaper on Ali.
Support is true, but idk, I don't use customer support on 3d printers. They're pretty simple machines.
Blender is just counter intuitive. I've heard people have an easier time with Fusion360, though it still takes work to learn.Why does modeling anything have to be such a pain, I just want to print a little stand for my PC speaker, but the idea of trying to make it in Blender is making me feel like it's not worth it.
Maybe I should use some kind of CAD program.I've knocked things like that out in fucking TinkerCAD. Sure they're not interesting-looking designs, but they do the job.
100%Maybe I should use some kind of CAD program.
I remember using SolidEdge and Autodesk Inventor way back in middle school. We actually did use calipers to measure things in class we modeled. But man did it take forever.For 3D printing you want a CAD program that works with parametric 3D models, so that you can precisely define the size of everything.
This is extra retarded since the not-low-IQ way to "reduce the waste uwu" is the spool-less refills for re-useable spools.Do those cardboard filament spools piss anyone else off? I mean I get trying to reduce all the plastic waste, but good God are the cardboard ones crap. They keep falling apart when they roll on the spool holder of my printer, so I end up with little cardboard shavings everywhere.
This thread might be helpful: https://kiwifarms.net/threads/firearm-3d-printing-general.59485/What's the place for 3d printed guns now?
It seems the previous best source for 3d printed guns, Odysee, is slowly eating itself. Trying to download from there is like 50% errors for me now.