Another important factor is that this is the first consumer printer designed by Prusa with an enclosure from the start, and it having temperature regulation means the components were designed to work fine in a heated enclosure. This isn't the case for the Prusa Mini for example, which is why its enclosure is quite large compared to the actual printer and you can't just heat it up too much as the extruder was meant to be used at room temperature.
Openness and upgrade ability are the reasons I own prusa. I have room for one printer, my mk3 has been upgraded multiple times to what it is now mk4s over the years. No need to throw out a perfectly good printer just to upgrade. The old motors become backups in case of failure. With bambu they are "single use" printers.
@@t3r083 it's only 10C off, which doesn't realistically restrict filament options as most hight temp filaments print at 290C and then jump to 330C, which neither can print, so it's not a deal breaker any way, and if you do need a hotter hotend both have 3rd party hotends that exceed 400C
@@dogedogego basically bambu is trying to implement a system that will call/report you to authorities if you try to print firearm, and any part of a “ghost gun”. Meaning that somehow they will be monitoring your prints and trying to detect if you print something that (in the US) is legal and call authorities, which, considering they are closed source and Chinese, means they could also be doing a number of other spyware related things. Also the fact that bambu is closed source, requires internet connection and Chinese makes a lot of US consumers a little paranoid. And for non US consumers, they don’t have a good support team and don’t really support maintenance of their appliances.
Another important factor is that this is the first consumer printer designed by Prusa with an enclosure from the start, and it having temperature regulation means the components were designed to work fine in a heated enclosure. This isn't the case for the Prusa Mini for example, which is why its enclosure is quite large compared to the actual printer and you can't just heat it up too much as the extruder was meant to be used at room temperature.
Openness and upgrade ability are the reasons I own prusa. I have room for one printer, my mk3 has been upgraded multiple times to what it is now mk4s over the years. No need to throw out a perfectly good printer just to upgrade. The old motors become backups in case of failure. With bambu they are "single use" printers.
@@Corn_Pops_Rusty_Razor W mans
Prisa Core can’t get as hot as the Bambu tho
@@t3r083 it's only 10C off, which doesn't realistically restrict filament options as most hight temp filaments print at 290C and then jump to 330C, which neither can print, so it's not a deal breaker any way, and if you do need a hotter hotend both have 3rd party hotends that exceed 400C
I thought Bambu labs first printer was the X1, doesn’t that mean the entire time bambu labs has created printers they have been better then prusa?
@@cooperbraidwood7204 yesn't, prusa has been around longer than Bambu, but yes, once Bambu joined the competition, yes
I agree its a big deal and bambu played their hand, and they showed they will do the wrong thing giving the choice
What happened?
@@dogedogego basically bambu is trying to implement a system that will call/report you to authorities if you try to print firearm, and any part of a “ghost gun”. Meaning that somehow they will be monitoring your prints and trying to detect if you print something that (in the US) is legal and call authorities, which, considering they are closed source and Chinese, means they could also be doing a number of other spyware related things.
Also the fact that bambu is closed source, requires internet connection and Chinese makes a lot of US consumers a little paranoid.
And for non US consumers, they don’t have a good support team and don’t really support maintenance of their appliances.
TLDR, a lot of scummy decisions that directly go against the popular 3D printing communities beliefs. And just ignoring most of their own community.
Can't you just print with the microSD card and not connect it to the internet? Or just connect to a local lan
@@ArjunRavi nope.
are you sitting one a bouncy ball?
@@AA-yn5nx Yeah XD, I'm such a professional filmer lol
@@oneletterlonmy grammar could also use some help.