Prusa i3 Mk3S kit can be had for around 700 bucks and is one of the best bang for your buck printers. You can either buy the kit and assemble yourself or buy it premade for $1000 ish. There is also the Ender 3 which is good. Do not get the cheap Chinese 3d printers as many of them fail after 5-6 prints. Polylactic Acid or ABS are popular filaments, with ABS being better for final products. PLA is not as strong but is plenty tough for most applications. Learn how to use Blender (3d modelling software), Cura 3d (slicer), Autodesk Fusion 360, and learn how to play around with .stl and .obj files using the aforementioned software.
Some websites:
3dprintingcanada.com <-- trusted place to purchase 3d printers and filament
thingiverse.com <--- place to download free .stl files to practice 3d printing
Feel free to send a PM if you have any more questions. I am not an expert by any means but I have a degree of familiarity.
Thanks, great starting point. let me do some research , Cheers
I have a background in CNC, not really recent, but what can I get if I go "all in" for $5000?
I've used Cadcam software? am I knocking on the same door?
Prusa i3 Mk3S kit can be had for around 700 bucks and is one of the best bang for your buck printers. You can either buy the kit and assemble yourself or buy it premade for $1000 ish. There is also the Ender 3 which is good. Do not get the cheap Chinese 3d printers as many of them fail after 5-6 prints. Polylactic Acid or ABS are popular filaments, with ABS being better for final products. PLA is not as strong but is plenty tough for most applications. Learn how to use Blender (3d modelling software), Cura 3d (slicer), Autodesk Fusion 360, and learn how to play around with .stl and .obj files using the aforementioned software.
Some websites:
3dprintingcanada.com <-- trusted place to purchase 3d printers and filament
thingiverse.com <--- place to download free .stl files to practice 3d printing
Feel free to send a PM if you have any more questions. I am not an expert by any means but I have a degree of familiarity.
This could not be further from the truth
Ive got an Anet A8 the cheapest of the cheap that is still going strong. Even if it did fail which its unlikely to do, its a Prusa i3 clone so parts and support are abundant. You do not have to buy a $1000 printer to get into the game and start making good prints, and there are MANY affordable options out there that will get you printing. I'm eyeballing the Creality Ender 3 right now on Amazon for $289 w/ free shipping for Prime members. As long as you stick with a Prusa i3 clone you really cant go wrong.
Do you know what they said went wrong with their printers? I can't think of anything that would be difficult to fix or replace yourself on these i3 clones. The most expensive part I can think of would probably be the hotbed but even then a straight up replacement (no upgrade) would only be like 50$.Good to know. I have heard horror stories with some of the cheaper Chinese 3d printers with regards to reliability. But if it served you well then I am glad.
If you're already planning to spend real money for a real machine, and have a CNC background, I would go look at the Markforged machines. They aren't a hobby machine. Highly capable. I'm considering picking one up as the next major tool purchase for the shop. Bonus is the ability to print carbon fibre. You can also imbed continuous fibre reinforcement that creates parts with a strength nearing machined aluminum.
www.markforged.com