Apparently, the last time I owned a working 3D printer Solutech was still in Business
Apparently, the last time I owned a working 3D printer Solutech was still in Business
Man, what else have I missed?
Apparently, the last time I owned a working 3D printer Solutech was still in Business
Man, what else have I missed?
Yeah as with any new gotta have technology, there comes a point where a great weeding out of less than efficient providers happens. And it's been happening to many 3D companies for a while now.
Yeah it's a lot of different names and I thought I was keeping up but I guess I shouldn't expect the same companies from the days of repraps to be unchanged in this new era of auto printers.
Damn I didn't know Solutech went out of business. I like(d) their filament and still have a couple spools left.
I was deeply upset when I went looking for them and realized there was nothing.
The QR code literally took me to a scam gambling site and that was my first clue.
lol My new Carbon printed it's way through two rolls of 7 year old PLA last week and it's doing fine with the equally old ABS (all Hatchbox). I also have one old roll of PLA and a couple of PETG that are less useful, but they were no-name stuff that were troublesome new and are at least partially to blame for me giving up on printing back then.
Still, it's nice to see 3d printing is finally not too finicky to tolerate. With this machine, if I get a failure, it's a lot easier to narrow down the cause.
Tons of incremental updates.
Based on the printer in the picture I think you have one of the answers, lol.
The other answer is slicers, but if you're using Bambu's you've also seen that change now.
Hahaha yeah, my last printer I bought before this one was a prusa mk2 and I don't mean 2.5 I mean 2.
So I've never had a removable build plate even.
It feels a whole lot more than incremental.
I actually havent actually used the bambu slicer yet either. Just been using internal files and the whole app thing to print test pieces.
If you are using Bamboo slicer, you are pretty much using Prusa slicer since it's directly taken from that with minor changes. I've noticed I've been slowly migrating away from Prusa slicer, a fork of Marlin, to Orca slicer - which is a fork of Bamboo. The reason is Prusa slicer is now concentrating on updating for the new Mk4 and XL printers with a nod to the Mini. I'm still quite content my Mk3s+ and don't need all those new updates for printers I don't own.