P1S upgrading to Carbon Fiber printability | 1/2

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
  • In this video, I upgrade my Bambu Lab P1S to a Bambu Lab X1C by changing the hotend and extruder gears.
    Bambu materials used in video:
    - Hardened Steel Extruder Gear Assembly: eu.store.bambu...
    - Bambu Hotend - P1 Series: eu.store.bambu...
    - Bambu Engineering Plate: eu.store.bambu...
    Music in this video:
    Intro song: Lensko - Rebirth
    Video song: Deep Hat - Vibe Tracks
    linktr.ee/Crea...
    Timestamps:
    00:01 Desassembling extruder
    00:27 replacing extruder gears
    01:34 Installing new hotend
    02:10 Printing with PAHT-CF

Комментарии • 5

  • @sebastian_olthuis
    @sebastian_olthuis 2 месяца назад +6

    Eh you should not put carbon fiber in your ams (those gears are not hardend) get a drying box next to it and use a PTFE splitter so the Bambu pulls it out of there

    • @Creative_3DPrinting
      @Creative_3DPrinting  2 месяца назад +1

      Drybox is better indeed but AMS can perfectly handle carbon fiber filaments. Before we had a drybox at work, we printed 24/7 PAHT-CF parts with the filament in de AMS without ever needing to replace a feeder and we still do it 😉

    • @sebastian_olthuis
      @sebastian_olthuis 2 месяца назад +3

      @@Creative_3DPrinting The ams can print it yes but it very bad for your ams. I have worked with the Bambu printers since the day the x1 released. The only supported carbon fiber Filament is Bambu carbon fiber Filament and not even all it I remember correctly. The reason some are okay is because of the extremely low amount of carbon fiber. Also 99% of carbon fiber filaments are weaker than pla due to how carbon fiber functions you would need a very specific part and settings. Even then you need continuous carbon fiber Filament which is quite expensive otherwise it won't make the part stronger.

    • @Creative_3DPrinting
      @Creative_3DPrinting  2 месяца назад

      ​@@sebastian_olthuis The filament I use is compatible for the AMS (it was on the website) but as you said, it's better to use a drybox.

    • @zedriccopeland8878
      @zedriccopeland8878 Месяц назад +2

      @@Creative_3DPrinting yes it can handle it. But it will require you replacing parts due to carbon fiber, being very abrasive.