If you are going to show people how to print using bambu printers, and AMS, syncing the filament in the slicer works best. And... if the printer has bambu filament in it, it will tell you the exact filament in the slot, by using the RFID tags. Others will need to be inputted manually, and yes, PLA,, PETG, and so on, will need to be looked at as well. I wish you all the best of luck with the tutorials, but if you do continue this, more details, and guidance will help more people. Have a good one!
This is the same in Orca Slicer as well. If you use a single color printer, you can do manual color changes following the same steps above and setting your printer to a mutli-color, single extruder then add the M600 (Marlin Code) in the Machine G-Code Change Filament G-Code box under the printer. This video pointed me to how to setup multi-color in the STL without editing the G Code and it simplifies the number of filament swaps I have to do. Awesome!
They added pegs to prusa slicer in order to help combining parts cut in half like that. It is just a matter of time before the feature gets added to bambu and orca slicer.
I don't even have a 3D printer yet, and just looking at the chili, I can already see that you just print it in 6 parts. Print the red and green separately, and split them down the middle so you don't need supports. The other two are tiny pins to align the two halves. Then glue them together. Don't need any AMS. And you don't waste filament with purge blocks and poops.
No music!!! Thank you so much. I can actually hear what you're saying!
If you are going to show people how to print using bambu printers, and AMS, syncing the filament in the slicer works best. And... if the printer has bambu filament in it, it will tell you the exact filament in the slot, by using the RFID tags. Others will need to be inputted manually, and yes, PLA,, PETG, and so on, will need to be looked at as well. I wish you all the best of luck with the tutorials, but if you do continue this, more details, and guidance will help more people. Have a good one!
This is the same in Orca Slicer as well. If you use a single color printer, you can do manual color changes following the same steps above and setting your printer to a mutli-color, single extruder then add the M600 (Marlin Code) in the Machine G-Code Change Filament G-Code box under the printer. This video pointed me to how to setup multi-color in the STL without editing the G Code and it simplifies the number of filament swaps I have to do. Awesome!
Such a great tutorial. Thank you so much for showing the different ways to split/assemble.
Also with cutting vertically with a print like that I think cutting it at the base of the colour change would help hide the join line.
before cutting you can select (( add connectors)) for easy alighnment
There are Many other ways to slice in multicolor even without an AMS.. but a good basic overview to show some options..
They added pegs to prusa slicer in order to help combining parts cut in half like that.
It is just a matter of time before the feature gets added to bambu and orca slicer.
It’s already in orca!
Nicely done
Is there a way to save a sliced model with multi colors? As in if I wanted to print multiple of the same model with multi colors
Nice
How would you suggest going about this same issue with instead an Ender 3 Max Neo? Also it possible to use cura to print in multiple colors?
I don't even have a 3D printer yet, and just looking at the chili, I can already see that you just print it in 6 parts. Print the red and green separately, and split them down the middle so you don't need supports. The other two are tiny pins to align the two halves. Then glue them together. Don't need any AMS. And you don't waste filament with purge blocks and poops.