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dalben 8 hours ago

We have a Bambu Lab P2S at work. I was considering to buy one myself, because of the ease of use and relative affordability.

What printers are similarly priced and have similar specs, for someone relatively new to 3D printing?

hamandcheese 8 hours ago | parent | next [-]

> What printers are similarly priced and have similar specs, for someone relatively new to 3D printing?

None, really. Prusa printers are good enough though. If you value freedom and privacy, its worth a few extra dollars.

mcv 8 hours ago | parent | next [-]

It would have been so easy for Bambu to embrace freedom and privacy and continue to enjoy our loyalty all the way to the bank, but apparently they've got to burn down what they've got.

I've got an a1 mini myself, and I'm not aware of anything comparable on the market, but there's a clear need for some competition now.

wongarsu 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

For the market overall this is great: Bambu is forcing the other manufacturers to innovate on features, ease of use and affordability in order to keep up. At the same time Bambu's antics prevent them from completely dominating. Any new printer that can compare to a Bambu (or exceed it in interesting ways) gets rewarded with customers that want anything but Bambu

It's a much more interesting and dynamic place than before Bambu's market entry

nickff 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I find it interesting that many commenters here do not regard anything as 'competitive' unless it offers the same price/performance, while completely disregarding these lock-ins and privacy invasions. It seems that the reason we have all these restrictive and otherwise problematic companies is that you folks just do not assign a cost to their behaviour.

mcv 7 hours ago | parent [-]

I was not aware of this behaviour when I bought it.

But you raise a good issue: are they selling these at a loss in order to leverage some sort of lock-in? If that's the reason they're so cheap, that's important to know.

I honestly wouldn't mind paying twice as much for something that's more open. But it's also an issue I haven't looked very deeply into. For my first 3d printer I just wanted something cheap and foolproof.

Panda4 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> None, really.

Have you looked into Centauri Carbon ?

throwaway219450 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Without the AMS, a Prusa Mk4 (used?) You're always going to pay a bit more but they're European built and extremely repairable. Unfortunately you do need to pay for the Mk4 or Core to match Bambu's ease of use. The Mini is also great for occasional use if you don't need a big build volume.

The Mk3 is also easy, and can be had for cheap now, but it doesn't have auto Z-adjust which is really nice. It's also noticeably slower compared to the latest models.

Jeremy1026 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Creality K2 Combo[1] is pretty much spec for spec a P2S. Add in OrcaSlicer (Bamboo Slicer fork), and you basically have a non-closed system P2S. I've printed 652 hours on it since December, about 4.7km worth of filament has been ran through it. Great upgrade over the Creality K1 that is sitting next to it.

[1] https://store.creality.com/products/k2-k2-combo-3d-printer-l...

Panda4 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Eleego Centauri Carbon is cheaper and is just plug and play. I have no experience with 3D printing and have been using it for a while with no problems or messing around with the printer.

bdcravens 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Most printers these days will give you good performance when you buy them. Bigger issue is how reliable it'll be after you put 1000 hours on it. Bambu Lab is the best in that regard, but many other brands will give you the results you want, you'll just need to become good at troubleshooting.

kennywinker 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Check out the qidi q2 (or the q2c depending on what you plan to print) - it reviews well compared to the p2s or even the x1c, runs fully open firmware, and is a fair bit cheaper than the bambu comparables.

tecleandor 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I've been told about the Snapmaker U1, but I haven't tested it. More expensive than a Bambu but cheaper than a Prusa (I think)

the__alchemist 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Prusa: Probably less reliable/weaker UX, but good enough. Raise3D: Similar reliability, but more expensive.

himinlomax 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Prusa, but it's more expensive.