this post was submitted on 27 Nov 2023
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3D Printing

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Hello! I am a former anycubic mega s victim, got it gifted by a friend(because he didn't use it) and got sucked into the rabbithole of 3d printing. Printed a few parts after calibrating and cleaning it up, but then got punched in the face with onslaught of problems that dont make sense. Tried to fix 'em all, but in result just didn't get to print anything for long. Now it shortcircuits itself when it starts up. So gonna salvage the thing for what I can.

In the meanwhile, I want to find a machines to look at that will increase my skills and knowledge further, not to just shortcut to just print stuff. Having available database of known problems will help a lot, that was the main issue I had with the mega S. Also something not expensive like the prusa mk4.(less than 400$ probably) Any recommendations for such a machine?

Sorry for such a question, if there are treads on reddit or lemmy, send me links to them, I will be happy to read them!

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[–] Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz 2 points 1 year ago

Unfortunately there is a chance of getting a lemon no matter what model you buy, that's just the nature of manufacturing. Since you're already familiar with the anycubic, is there a reason not to try again (I don't know if it falls within your price range or not)?

If you just want to start from scratch with a model that is highly upgradeable, I'm a satisfied owner of one of the original Ender 3 Pro models, and I have printed a number of upgrades including a full direct-drive head, so there's a lot of room to grow. Personally I am a fan of any model that you have to assemble yourself because you learn so much just from the process of squaring up the frame and seeing how everything goes together. The biggest complaint anyone has about these printers is the manual bed leveling, which is an art form of its own, but the process is actually pretty straightforward once you understand what each step is for (and don't let anyone tell you that the paper method is the end of it -- that's only enough to barely get you started so you don't damage the machine while actually leveling the bed), and the bed can stay level for a year or more with only minor tweaks. Yeah the Ender printers aren't in a pretty package, and they don't do everything automatically for you, but there's a huge community to help troubleshoot almost every problem and they will produce very clean and consistent prints.