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How bad is a $95 3D Printer?? - YouTube
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- Not everyone has the
cashola to shell out
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on a fancy 3D printer.
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And even relatively basic
home enthusiast ones
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can still cost hundreds or
even thousands of dollars.
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Or at least, they did.
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Feast your eyes on the Easythreed X1,
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a sub $100 3D printer,
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straight to you from Shenzhen, China.
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It moves, it extrudes,
sometimes it goofs up.
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But it has basically zero
competition in this price bracket,
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so we absolutely needed
to take a look at it.
[35]
Just like I need to tell
you about our sponsor.
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(upbeat music)
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(electronic beeping)
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I know what you're thinking
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because I was thinking
the exact same thing.
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This thing has to be
a hot pile of garbage.
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But hold on for a second.
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Even if it is hot garbage,
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you have to appreciate
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that hitting such a low price point
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while delivering something
that functions at all
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is pretty impressive.
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There are multiple injection-molded parts,
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each one requiring a
costly tool to manufacture
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and it even comes 99% preassembled.
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There's clearly a lot of
value for your money here,
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as long as you temper your expectations.
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The accessory package
includes what you need
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and absolutely nothing more,
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you get a small screw driver,
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a few meters of PLA filament,
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a card reader and microSD card
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preloaded with manuals, software,
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and a test print file,
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and finally a 12-volt
2.5 Amp power supply.
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The X1 gets away with such a
wimpy power supply, by the way,
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because there is no heated print bed
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but that means that you're
only able to print in PLA
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as most other plastics
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will have bad adhesion and warping issues
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without a heating bed,
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which is fine.
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I mean, we can't recommend
PLA for anything structural
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but for decorative prints,
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single-use widgets or toys,
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it gets the job done just fine,
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that is as long as it's a
decent quality filament.
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Out of the gate,
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the included G-code file
produced this little cat model
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and there is a lot that
we can learn from this.
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The stringing between
the ears and the tail
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tells us that while the
X1's hot and cooling fan
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seems to be working,
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the lack of a part cooling fan,
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so one that helps solidify the plastics
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after it's been extruded,
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means that the printer ends up
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either dragging material
along with the nozzle
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or printing on top of
semi-liquid material,
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There's also visible porosity
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along the perimeters of the model
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that tells us that our filament
is not extruding evenly.
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Now initially,
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we blamed the printer
for this, understandably,
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but upon closer inspection
of the included filament,
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we discovered that it is complete garbage.
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The diameter of this small
length of the starter filament
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varies by over 0.3 millimeters
from one end to the other.
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To put that in context,
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most manufacturers strive to
keep it under 0.05 millimeters
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across an entire spool like this one.
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The good news is that once we switched
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to some decent filament,
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the print quality actually
improved dramatically.
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It's still not great,
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especially side by side
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against prints that are coming
out of our Ultimaker 3 Plus,
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but it's in line with our expectations
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given the price point
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and I think we can do even better.
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So from here out,
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we're gonna be making our
own G-code using a slicer
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which takes our 3D model
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and slices it, hence the name,
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into multiple 2D layers
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that are laid down in order
to make the 3D shapes we want.
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Now Easythreed did
include their own slicer
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called Easyware which
uses the Unity engine.
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Yes, that Unity engine
from "Escape from Tarkov,"
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so that's neat.
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And it functions just fine
with the default settings,
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but the menu is a bit
unwieldy and for some reason
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the settings list kept
scrolling itself upward.
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So after one test print of our LTT logo,
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which I have right here,
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sort of holding together still.
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We made the decision to move to a slicer,
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that Colin, our writer for this video,
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was more familiar with.
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That's Prusa Slicer
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which actually ended up
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making things worse rather than better,
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believe it or not.
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Too much material was being extruded
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and the nozzle was too
low on the first layer,
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dragging itself around in the PLA.
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After iterating half a dozen times though
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and moving to a slightly larger coin,
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mostly just to help with the part cooling
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so that it's not going
over the exact same spot
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that's still liquid right away,
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we actually started to see
some half-decent results.
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Now we've still got some infill
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and perimeter blending issues,
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which was a little surprising
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given the up to 30% overlap that we tried,
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but overall big gains were made
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and we felt like the X1 was
ready to take on Benchy.
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The Benchy benchmark model
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is an excellent trial
print for a few reasons,
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one, it contains nearly every
difficult 3D printing feature,
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like curved overhangs,
tiny surface details,
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long curved perimeters,
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and both small and slanted holes.
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For comparison,
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this blue one here is printed
on our Ultimaker 3 Plus.
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You can check out our full
review on that printer
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in the card up here.
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Now it's not perfect.
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There's a bit of weird patterning
in the vertical surfaces
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but it has nice crisp
edges with no stringing,
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and its bridged sections are pretty good
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considering that there's no
support structure included.
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Most of these issues
can really be attributed
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to the lack of tuning
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and our fast print speed.
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Compared to the X1s,
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it's easy to see which
machine did the better job.
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Oh, by the way, we didn't mention this
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but it comes with a magnetic print bed.
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Mind you, it's kind of ruined already
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from just a dozen prints.
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But anyway, with more dialing in,
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we probably could get
better results than this,
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particularly on the
under-extruded sections
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but the results here are as expected.
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Our solid infill is still under-extruded
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which means that even after
the tuning we've done so far,
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there's more time we would need to invest
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in order to improve print reliability.
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These hanging bits under the roof here,
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indicate both a lack of speed and cooling.
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We see a similar problem in
the undersides of the archways
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and as for the smokestack on the top,
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that turned into a hot gooey blob.
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And this is an example of
fine detail print problems
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that you simply cannot fix
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by slowing down the printhead
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because it can't solidify with
the hot end so close to it.
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Now there are some files out there
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to hack a cooling fan onto this printer,
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and actually a heated
bed while you're at it.
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But this isn't the printer to buy
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if you're trying to do
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even a moderate amount of 3D printing.
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It's an ultra low buck starter machine,
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designed to fit onto a bookshelf
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or in a dorm room closet
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along with all of your
shirts from LLTStore.com.
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If all you wanted was
something to tinker with,
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and if you can manage to
make a bath toy or two
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for your kid, so much the better.
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Well it works,
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which is actually more than we expected
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for under $100.
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But if you want consistency
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and plug and play operation,
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it's worth the money
to grab something like
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a Monoprice Mini
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which comes in at 219
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or if you can swing it, a Prusa Mini.
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Speaking of swinging,
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I'm swinging right into
this sponsor segue.
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Check it out today at the
link below to learn more.
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If you guys enjoyed this video,
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wow, we don't actually do
a lot of 3D printing videos
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but hey, you could check out
[483]
our Ultimaker 3 Plus review I guess.
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That was a long time ago.
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Luke was still reviewing stuff.
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