Close



Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 14
  1. #1

    Need help choosing a 3d printer

    hello everyone, im not to sure where to ask this but im hoping someone on here could help me
    so im very new to 3d printing never used one before, however i have started to get into cosplay prop/weapon replica design and i was looking for a good 3d printer for doing weapon replicas from movies and games etc
    someone told me i should get a CR10s Pro because of the large print space and the automatic bed level but the reviews seemed to be very mixed, i am hoping to a find a printer that i dont hve to spend weeks fixing or sorting issues on, just something that is reliable i have a budget of $600

  2. #2
    I will be watching this carefully because that was my goal about a year ago and spent more than double that. I did achieve the goal but would like to know what is now available as rock solid at a low price.

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by airscapes View Post
    I will be watching this carefully because that was my goal about a year ago and spent more than double that. I did achieve the goal but would like to know what is now available as rock solid at a low price.
    the CR10s Pro seems fantastic but because im a newbie at this i have no idea how trust worthy the company is as its a chinese brand, there seems to be lots of good reviews and what not but i've also seen lots of people saying they had to spend months and $100s sorting issues out, problem i have is i dont know which side to belive

  4. #4
    I was looking for the same help then I found this article https://10unbiased.com/best-3d-printers-reviews/ It helped me get to know how to buy a 3D printers and what are the latest printers out there.

  5. #5
    Hi,

    I have just pulled the trigger and am waiting for the delivery of my #1 3d printer. fwiw i opted for the creality ender 3.

    I will admit to allowing utubes probably sponsored content, sway my decision. but the factors i considered prime were/are:

    Cost (?160 delivered via gearbest germany - no vat risk till the end of the month..)
    Expected speed/time to get the machine into functional production.
    (Involving a lot of learning, and 3d printing of printer additions/fixes of which the ender 3 seems to 'Need' only a few)
    Cost of expected near future upgrades.
    Motor drivers for quieting down, main board for enabling driver upgrade and expanding features
    self levelling bed upgrade

    In short i wanted a cheap as possible introduction to 3d printing with a machine that should get me up and running as quickly as possible with a full basic feature set and ability to print small useful components mainly enclosures etc for home automation solutions based on esp dev boards and Pi-0 servers.

    If i made a good decision or not ? well time will tell, and my post count in here may soon become an indicator of how much trouble i have..

  6. #6
    Super Moderator curious aardvark's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Posts
    8,801
    well that was probably a huge mistake fil.
    ender 3's are the single most problematical printer around at the moment.
    it doesn't help that they use the worst i3 design out there.
    It seems like every day we have someone else on here, who's been suckered in by the 3 people in the world who have working ender 3's and make youtube videos.

    the cr10s pro - has the same crappy bed design, single central rail, mounted on sideways wheels. basically the bed will never ever be completely level.
    However because it uses aluminium extrusion, you can probably mount a couple of side rod and bearing supports. I'd do that.
    Actually I'd never buy an i3 with that design in the first place :-)

    If you are going to buy an i3 - basically an open framed printer where the bed moves in the x dimension and the printhead in the y & z(or the other way round). Then make sure the bed has rods and bearings on both edges to keep it stable.
    One reason I bought the ctc i3 pro b - cheapest printer in the uk, But fundamentally based on a good design.
    I bought it to mod and keep the overall cost under ?100. And it's nearly ready for work. I certainly didn't expect it to work as it came. to be fair, it actually did - but once I've finished the mods and sorted the gcode out, it's going to be a really useful workhorse.
    But I would never buy an i3 with just the central support for the bed. The larger the print volume, the more hassle you're going to have with it.
    I've played with horizontal wheel mounts and they seem stable. but bear in mind that even a 0.1mm wobble - which won't be discernible to the human senses - out at the edges of the bed, can bugger your print up.
    And it doesn't matter whether you have auto bed levelling or not, it's going to wobble - so the auto levelling is practically irrelevant.

    Back to printing large items for cosplay:- Invest more money.
    A good cosplay prop will sell for hundreds of dollars, so look on the printer as a serious investment.
    Once you get good at making items for yourself - sell them to other people, you'll recoup your printer cost pretty quickly.
    realistically you need a printer with dual printheads. Soluble supports will be your very bestest friend.
    The near perfect machine is a formbot t-rex2 - not cheap, but huge build volume, independant dual extruders and a whole host of cool features.
    https://www.formbot3d.com/formbot-la...ize_p0018.html

    The other thing it's worth looking at - which is Tevo little monster: https://tevo3dprinterstore.com/produ...3d-printer-kit
    Very good price, not dual extruders, but large volume and delta print speeds.
    tevo's i3's are all based on the central wheel rail design, so I'd avoid them.
    Last edited by curious aardvark; 03-18-2019 at 06:59 AM.

  7. #7
    Cheers curious_aardvark, probably not the last newbie error i make, hopefully small and centrally located prints will mitigate the design flaw. apologies to the OP for the minor thread hijack..

  8. #8
    Super Moderator curious aardvark's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Posts
    8,801
    good luck :-)

  9. #9
    Student
    Join Date
    Apr 2019
    Location
    scotland
    Posts
    11
    Follow inov3D On Twitter Add inov3D on Facebook
    there is a lot of great 3d printers out there it all depends on the style you want to go for a good beginner machine would be fdm Cartesian cr10s is a good option and filament start of with pla

  10. #10
    I also want to know how to choose a 3d printer and thanks to discus this topic

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •