Duet versus Bambu
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@Exerqtor I have to agree. I have a few people who run klipper and the screen does make me a bit jealous.
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@Herve_Smith yeah I was thinking cheaper. More in line with the K1 and p1p. The tool changer is a nice machine but it's getting pretty old. I'm very anti-cantilever bed at this point.
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@breed The toolchanger may be old, but the engineering is very solid. On mine I have never had to adjust the bed or create a new heightmap after the initial setup, unlike pretty much every other printer I've had.
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I think the biggest attraction for the Bambu is a) the AMS and b) the price point for a fully enclosed printer.
The latter has by now been copied (with varying success) by Qidi, Creality, Kingroon (Qidis looks like the most solid, but they built similar machines before so no surprises there. Creality and Kingroon did some questionable things so we see where the funding Bambu Labs has got spent). The former is still unclear.
For me the biggest deterrent is the encrypted telemetry data that gets sent back to Bambu for everything you print, and the closed source nature of the thing. I know some people are currently having fun with Ghidra and jtag pirates, but we really shouldn't need to do that. Unfortunately the target audience does not care until Open Source.
Looking that a hightemp printer like the Valkyrie can be built for about 1800$, with some industrial design and mass production approaches, a duet-based printer in the price range of the Bambu X1C might be possible (not so sure about the P1P/P1S). But I agree with previous posters; integration into the slicer and some fresh love for DWC and a display would be needed -- and that incurs cost that is not easily recuperated with a machine aimed at the cut throat margin consumer market as long as you pay EU salaries.
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Hah, I forgot to add that the Troodon v2 is close to a commercially available printer that can keep up with the Bambus of the world, running RRF stock (albeit on a custom board), for a comparable price.
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@oliof I think it's just a matter of time before someone either creates an open source ams from scratch or designs a board to replace the board in the Bambu ams so it can work with klipper and rrf. Board would need to have both USB and can fd. I don't know if the motors on the Bambu ams are even steppers. I figure next month when creality releases their code for the K1 and K1 max the klipper people will be hard on trying to get the Bambu ams to work with the creality machines.
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@breed AFAIK the Bambu AMS speaks CAN, so ... who knows, maybe it already could work with klipper machines and the secondary CAN bus on the Duet3 6HC (with some extra work on the latter) if you could figure out the protocol.
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@oliof pretty sure it's encrypted.
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@breed encryption can be broken. Allegedly there is a group of people armed with jtag pirates and ghidra looking at the inner workings of bambu. This is only third hand knowledge though, so I cannot comment on any alleged findings at this time.
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@oliof I hope so. The ams and being able paint features in the slicer seem like the real advancement that came from Bambu to 3d printing.
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@breed Well correct me if I'm wrong, BUT I'm quite sure the "paint in" feature ain't Bambu's doing, but Prusa Research in PrusaSlicer v2.4 onward?
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@Exerqtor you are right, thats a PrusaSlicer feature.
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@Exerqtor You are correct. Not sure if prusaslicer has paint on colors for multicolor printing or if that was added with Bambu slicer. I know prusaslicer had paint on supports and support blocking.