Comment by tourmalinetaco
13 days ago
Why would I recommend anyone buy a printer that cannot be repaired? That’s just throwing money away and creating e-waste. Even a Prusa Mk4 makes more sense than the X1 when you consider repairability.
13 days ago
Why would I recommend anyone buy a printer that cannot be repaired? That’s just throwing money away and creating e-waste. Even a Prusa Mk4 makes more sense than the X1 when you consider repairability.
Have you looked at the parts shop? You absolutely can repair a Bambu printer, and as someone with a farm of the things can attest that it's no more complex than working on Prusa's. You still need to buy the parts from somewhere. Bambu's own pricing on parts is pretty reasonable in my opinion.
Bambu sells replacement parts for their printers. Very little of the printer is not repairable.
Not only does Bambu sell parts, but there’s a pretty healthy market of third party parts as well. Saying these printers are irreparable is plain false.
At some point the value proposition makes sense. People buy non repairable 2D printers all the time.
Also, as the other commenter noted, they actually are quite repairable. Bambu offers pretty much every part you could imagine and at prices that are extremely reasonable. Any wear component you’d expect is easy to replace.
> At some point the value proposition makes sense. People buy non repairable 2D printers all the time.
Where can I buy a repairable 2D printer? I would prefer this if I could make a choice.
Anything commercial that is also the size of a small fridge. You don't actually want one.