First steps in 3d printing
I first saw a 3d printer in operation a few years back. I knew about the technology, but it was still fairly new outside industry and there seemed to be a lot of DIY involved with printers coming as a kit of parts and people making parts for each other. Now they seem to be everywhere and I know a few people who have them. I had not looked into them recently until I saw this post by @ashtv. He has the Bambu Lab A1 mini that is pretty cheap. I was thinking of getting that, but someone at work recommended I go for the slightly bigger A1 so I would be less limited on the size of objects.
It required some assembly with just two main parts of the base and the upright with a few screws and cables to be put in place. A cable reel clips on the top and there is a metal plate that the prints are made on attached by magnets.
Of course I wanted to use it straight away, but the rolls of filament I ordered at the same time came the next day. They do give you a tiny (20g) sample though. There are some models stored in the onboard memory that include the 'Benchy' boat that people use as a benchmark of printing performance. It came out pretty nice. I also printed a tiny whistle.
They have a mobile app to access the massive library of models and you can kick off prints direct from that. The printer has a camera so you can check on progress wherever you are.
Once my filament arrived I could try some bigger models. There are lots of accessories for the printer itself such as a scraper to get prints off the bed and various types of 'poop bin' to catch the waste filament that gets ejected before a print.
There are so many toys and other frivolous things you can make, but I wanted to make practical items too. I found various drumstick holders and this one fits on my Roland kit nicely. The print quality is really good and items are lighter than you expect as they are largely hollow. That cuts down on how much filament you need as well as making the print quicker. I also printed some clips to hold pairs of sticks together in my bag.
I have lots of ideas for things I want to print and those may include gifts for others.
This printer is upgradeable to print in four colours. I could have got the rig for that at the same time for a discount, but I thought I would see how it goes first. I have been watching a few videos that offer tips on how to get good results. They point out that multi-colour printing can be wasteful as each time it changes filament the old one has to be ejected from the print head. With some models there can be more waste than model.
Then there is the whole thing of doing your own designs. I have not done much 3d design, so I will have to look up tutorials. You can import models from other sources such as Thingiverse and Printables. That requires the desktop software that I have yet to try. I use Linux, but there is a version for that.
I feel I have entered a new world of possibilities and I hope to get plenty of use from my new toy. I know we have a few other users on Hive. I own a few printed items that I have purchased from the community and I have a Hive keyring from Hivefest that someone made.
You can expect more posts from me about this.
There were some concerns about the Bambu a little bit ago, but I think they back tracked on it after consumer outcry. I can't remember exactly what it was now. This looks pretty cool though and I like that there are starting to be more practical uses for these devices besides just printing tchotchkeys. I have an old Dremel printer in my office.
I think they restricted what other software you can use. I do not see that as a huge problem, but some people like to have more options. I have seen their printers described as for people who want to print rather than those who like messing with the printers themselves.
I am a fan of open source stuff, so I can understand why people would be upset.
Interesting to see how easy it is to get into 3D printing now. This model printer looks a good choice for beginners as it comes with sample filament to help you start.
As I said it is only enough of a sample for very small items, but filament is not too expensive.
If/when you buy&stockup more filament for future prints, be sure to keep it in sealed dry space. At first it may not seem much of a difference, but a filament that caught moisture really can screw up a print. Not catastrophically, but the quality loss will be really tangible.
I experimented with a filament dryer. 50-50 outcome ratio, really. Nothing beats not allowing the moisture in, really.
I have heard about that issue already. So far I have one roll just sitting out on the printer and have seen no issues. I will bear it in mind though. I need to look into what other precautions I need to consider and what the regular maintenance should be. It keeps popping up a message about lubricating parts, but I am not sure it should need it so soon. I have seen some tools to print for spreading the grease. It is a precision tool and will need looking after.
Cheers and !BEER
Nice! My printer reminds me about lubrication only very rarely, and through very audible screeeee :)
When I bought my first printer, CR10, I think it was 2017 (geesh!), it took me something like 2 weeks to get a good print.. Now from what I hear from most sources, most of non-garbage printers run good prints literally out of the box. it's mind boggling to me, but actually that was totally to be expected. After all, we've already seen such evolution in normal classic scanners and printers.
I can't wait the moment I finally get my hands on multi-color/multi-material one :D
All my prints so far have been perfectly good. I may get the multi-spool add-on at some point. It can be useful if you have big prints that might run out of filament.
This tech has come a long way in the last few years. I really don't have time to be messing around too much just to print simple items.
I have seen some cool looking 3D printed dragons that are dynamic. Nice adventure
That's not top of my list, but people come up with some amazing stuff. Anyone into cosplay or other fantasy worlds could really use one of these.
That’s great news. Looked like you’re pretty clued up already. We got bored of only having three colours too… Green, pink and white! We need more.
What do you have in mind for bigger prints that make you choose it over the mini?
You’re right in that there’s scope for some really cool custom presents/gifts :)
What platform are you looking to explore to design your own 3D work?
We’ve been slowly learning TinkedCad with my son but his interest is fading a bit with so much overwhelming info I think.
I was looking at some little rack systems for network kit. I've not printed anything that big yet, but it just gives me more options.
I can see I will be buying more filament and need to try other types. I get that PETG is better for things that go outdoors.
I could try Blender, but I know there's a learning curve. I need to work out what I might want to make. For now I'll play with what's in the library.
I imagine that this marks a moment in time where your creative world is going to expand in an exciting way.
In Chicago, our library has 3D printers that we can print at for the cost of the filament and I love it. I switch living between Chicago and a east coast city and I was really considering buying a 3D printer because of the ability to print cases for electronics, but I decided to sign up for a makerspace with access to one instead. I still just pay for filament and have access to good 3D printers. I love them, very versatile! You'll love yours. I thought it might be a gimmick at first, but I've found serious usecases with it.
I have been to a local maker space, but did not have easy access to a printer before. I know there are various commercial services for it. I can see lots of possibilities and of course I will help out friends who want things made.
!BEER
Please tell your friends to back off
https://hive.blog/hive/@ureka.stats/the-untrending-report-hive-downvote-analysis-29-09-2025-20250929172045
Your friend themarkymark aka blocktrades has a 3d printer 😂
I know Marky does, but I doubt he's blocktrades, whatever you think. I can't influence either of them as you well know.
Have a good day.
Blocktrades owns that account and why would blocktrades delegate to Buildawhale when it's a blatant comment farm 🤔
Is this ok https://hive.blog/hive/@ureka.stats/the-untrending-report-hive-downvote-analysis-29-09-2025-20250929172045
How do you feel about this 🤔
I'm having a great day so far
As far as I know buildawhale is burning rewards as part of the financial management of Hive. blocktrades may support that, but that doesn't mean he supports all that marky does. These guys could make a lot more from Hive if they wanted the money. Your fight is with marky, so you have to change his mind about you. It's good to see you are not doing all the long comments every day, but if you keep attacking him then he may not stop. I did all I could and now it's your choice.
BTW I'm not looking at Insta generally so it's a waste of time to message me there. If you continue then I will block you there. I'm happy for everything to be public.
He's making tons of Hive rewards 😂😂😂😂 https://hive.blog/hive/@ureka.stats/the-untrending-report-hive-downvote-analysis-29-09-2025-20250929172045
I want one of these. I have no space. I've always wanted a 3D printer. I have no space. The only thing that I want to print is little endplates for our curtain rods. You know, the type that are just an ugly tube of steel, with no end cap?
All the end caps that come with curtains these days look like someone who just learned how to use a lathe spun something for a moment with a tool and made a circle.
I want an epic fkn dragon on the end of my curtain rods, or a platform that lets you build lego on the end of them (I don't have any lego, but I can steal some from my friends) :P
I barely have space in my study/office/studio, but it does not take up too much. I'm sure people design curtain rod ends or you could adapt models for that. I think there's a cross-over with Lego as you can make custom parts. I do have some Lego, so I could try that. It's a world of possibilities.
!BEER
I looked ... I could do the 3d modelling if I really wanted to, but the truth is they dont bug me that much. :p
The 3d printer getting in my way would bug me more... :p
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