The biggest thing to happen in 3D Printing in 2024 will be...

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
  • Video sponsored by PCBWay - www.pcbway.com - PCB Manufacturing, 3d Printing, CNC parts, and more..
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    It's the end of 2023, and we can't deny this has been a crazy year in 3D Printing. What's coming up in 2024? Who knows? Let's talk about it.
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Комментарии • 510

  • @Questchaun
    @Questchaun 9 месяцев назад +44

    I picked up an x1c and I cant believe how easy it is.
    I went from the printers are my hobby to the PRINTS are my hobby.

    • @DannyThompson54
      @DannyThompson54 8 месяцев назад +6

      THIS is the way the market is moving. Essentially appliances. That will bring in the Creatives who have shunned 3D printing as we have known it since day one.. Finally, 3D Printing is growing up. As someone who has been 3D Printing since Rep Rap days I for one say "Hurrah!"

    • @rightsdontcomewithpermits7073
      @rightsdontcomewithpermits7073 8 месяцев назад +2

      If it would "just print" then the customer support would not be so slammed. It practically none existed at this time. 3rd day and still no response to my ticket.
      And for the $ k1 is a better investment.
      I have x1c for a year now.

    • @BradKwfc
      @BradKwfc 8 месяцев назад +2

      Same here. Bought an X1 and within a week I sold my two Qidi 3d Printers as I figured they'd lose most of their value because of the insane next level performance. Print quality is always good.
      I only wish they could make the AMS work with TPU.

    • @stgfx7
      @stgfx7 7 месяцев назад

      I am glad to hear this as I recently bought a Snapmaker J1 then bought an upgrade fan kit but failures and confusion outnumber successes by at least 4 to 1.Odd thing is, I had purchased a bambu P1s partially because of the AMC and partially because another customer told me his son had an Ender and was having lots of trouble so he bought him a bambu X1c and he loves it so I said to myself well maybe this is the way to go . I have no small children or needs to produce toys and gadgets just mostly intrigued with learning how to make things using my brain to design them. a week later I reurned it to the store unopened because I felt I would rather be learning in the trenches ,maybe I was wrong...Thanks, I have my IDEX J1 printer and I amwaiting for parts but perhaps I will pickup a bambu printer to make me feel better about 3D Printing Lol

    • @benhebert2322
      @benhebert2322 7 месяцев назад

      @@rightsdontcomewithpermits7073 i disagree, we have a k1 Max in house and the Bambu still makes the better print. we are looking to buy an X1E soon

  • @bestbroseph1258
    @bestbroseph1258 9 месяцев назад +36

    i think the biggest advancement in resin will be in the resins themselves, more friendly ones for printing in the home that have less or no fumes, stronger resins on the cheap end, better filtration as standard on machines.
    in terms of color printing i think for people that are more casually in the hobby, or just enjoy 3d printing like myself, but arent into finishing and sanding/painting prints, it will be a game changer. theres open source projects picking up steam and once universal kits come out, i think it will explode. im under the impression that most people who 3d print arent really into finishing the prints due to the extra space needed, the mess, and equipment required, while if a printer can just spitout a complex colored part, is a lot more appealing to the mass market. the roads already been paved this year. also the 3d printed "look" of having layers is a lot less of an eyesore on multi colored prints because of the detail colors give, with the clean lines between them. also, a lot of the market who would love to have a color changer dont really want to shell out the $1k+ it usually costs to get one, so a universal one that can work with budget printers would sell well i imagine, as most people in the hobby like printing in petg and pla, things that are relatively easy to print without needing an enclosure or worrying about fumes.
    i mainly think this because currently 3d printers are employed more and more at schools where young people are getting a taste of it and learning the ropes, and will develop a love of the hobby, but not necessarily have the equipment to handle the more industrial filament types. i could be wrong but thats the fun part of guessing.

    • @float32
      @float32 9 месяцев назад +11

      No fume smell is very different than no fumes. I’m worried that smell free, but still toxic to breathe, reasons will be developed.

    • @FryedWater
      @FryedWater 9 месяцев назад

      like float32 said, no smell doesnt mean no cancer. Id much rather a very bad smelling resin to tell the user "hey make sure you vent me outside otherwise you'll get sick!", rather than a odorless resin that some idiot puts in their bedroom at night and sleeps to the carcinogenics in the air

    • @HellbellyUK
      @HellbellyUK 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@float32 I've already seen this with people talking about water washable resins. Still hazardous.

    • @conorstewart2214
      @conorstewart2214 9 месяцев назад

      Have you been living under a rock? You can get colour changing printers for much less than $1k, just look at the Bambu lab A1 series.

    • @godz1379
      @godz1379 8 месяцев назад

      resin will likely just get bigger print areas from here.

  • @condorman6293
    @condorman6293 9 месяцев назад +15

    The first company to do SLS for home use will revolutionize the industry moreso than any other we've seen so far.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +9

      It's so dusty I'm not sure it'll happen. Maybe if it can be completely encapsulated like laser printers.

    • @condorman6293
      @condorman6293 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@LostInTech3D For sure, dealing with the dust is the #1 issue. The first company to deal with that will explode just like Bambu.

    • @MetalheadAndNerd
      @MetalheadAndNerd 9 месяцев назад +1

      Another issue is the need for perfectly sized particles which would probably lead to manufacturers tying their printers to cartridges with chips.

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 9 месяцев назад +5

      Not going to happen. The material and material handling is a nightmare. Resin is already a pain in the ass but fine powder giving you cancer is even worse.
      Material jetting will probably be better and released for home use before SLS.

    • @malloot9224
      @malloot9224 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@condorman6293patents are very difficult in this space tho

  • @seljd
    @seljd 9 месяцев назад +33

    I want to see more multitool printers, either toolchanger or IDEX

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +15

      Idex 😁 there might be, I couldn't possibly comment

    • @hellothere6627
      @hellothere6627 9 месяцев назад +2

      I love IDEX I really hope the best for it

    • @kimmotoivanen
      @kimmotoivanen 9 месяцев назад +2

      There are currently 2 IDEX printers, Sovol (which might be OK-ish printer with upgraded extruders) and Snapmaker (which is quite pricey but seems to have bed moving up'n'down and fun calibration sequence 🙂).
      I'd like to see more as well. Or at least dual-head. I don't trust PLA and PETG printed through the same nozzle too much.

    • @hellothere6627
      @hellothere6627 9 месяцев назад

      @@kimmotoivanen There are more, I have a tenlog D3. If your buying from America lookup lnl tenlog. Great print quality, good size 300x300x350 and a good price point ~$550, super reliable. imo it better than bamboo lab, but it is missing AMS, which is a personal decision to make.

    • @See-essEll
      @See-essEll 8 месяцев назад

      @@kimmotoivanen there's also the Lulzbot Taz Pro. Their Titan Aero-based design is not great for PLA, but is good with ABS, PETG and support filaments.

  • @andyspoo2
    @andyspoo2 8 месяцев назад +11

    It would be great is Bambu made a filament recycling machine. They will make it better and cheaper than anyone else and considering they're making a lot of waste it makes sense if they helped to clean it up.

    • @mang0men1
      @mang0men1 8 месяцев назад +2

      it would be quite ironic (but very plausible to me) if bambu lab would be the company that makes recycling of filament user friendly and accesible just because they produced so much waste with their product in the first place.

    • @swedishpsychopath8795
      @swedishpsychopath8795 8 месяцев назад +1

      Nah - I don't think that will be necessary. They COULD however make a fill-nozzle that could feed the scraps into the walls in order to not use good material as filler / internal support. So sadly you are wrong.

    • @BradKwfc
      @BradKwfc 8 месяцев назад

      I world love one of it could be made small enough (like the same size as the X1). Can't tell you how many times I've been prototyping and ran out of filament when all I wanted was to do one more print... and all I could do was stare at the box of printed parts.

    • @swedishpsychopath8795
      @swedishpsychopath8795 8 месяцев назад

      @@BradKwfc I'm sorry, but I can't help you with that.

    • @andyspoo2
      @andyspoo2 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@BradKwfc I'm sure you like me have bags of filament bits...failed prints, supports etc. just waiting for the time they can be recycled. I'm loathed to throw them away. They have recycling facilities where they turn them back into filament in Germany, but I don't know of any others.

  • @stevec7596
    @stevec7596 9 месяцев назад +63

    Slicers with non planar printing would be awesome. There's already been some of that done but it's not built in to a slicer yet

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 9 месяцев назад

      Meh, the great thing about FDM is it´s simply in one plane.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +8

      I dont know who's gonna be brave enough to make a non planar slicer first, but I know who it isn't gonna be!

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 9 месяцев назад

      @@LostInTech3D Instead check out the Phrozen Acro printer, this thing is the Bambu Lab killer. This is way more interesting in my opinion.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад

      oh they finally named it? it wont be a bambu killer unless they figure out how to advertise it! Any prices yet?

    • @Sulfuron41
      @Sulfuron41 9 месяцев назад +1

      I totally love the idea, but feel like the application isn't as "universal" as many think, especially when you need specific hardware just to get it to work and not crash into your print. I'd much rather see more advancement and integration of printing in "mid air". That stuff is seriously cool!

  • @TheLumberJacked
    @TheLumberJacked 8 месяцев назад +6

    I have a Dremel 3D45 fully enclosed printer, core XY from 6 years ago. Still….STILL rock solid and have not replaced one part on it. Brilliant printer, does everything the newer ones do now. Heated bed, enclosed, LCD, air filtration, semi auto levelling (it measures bed level and tells you how much to adjust and it was fast and reliable to adjust), it also had rfid tags on the spool which auto set temps and speeds for the filament…pretty awesome stuff. I think this printer got a ton right but wasn’t a hobbyists darling because it wasn’t dirt cheap and painful to use all those years ago. It just worked. Because of that, I have never regretted the higher cost of that unit. I’m probably going to buy a Bambu X1 soon since it’s so much faster…and that’s where the Dremel is a bit painful, like many printers. Respect to Dremel for building out a printer with top notch (for its time) Bosch parts and quality steppers and screws.

    • @JustinBuildsThings
      @JustinBuildsThings 8 месяцев назад

      its not a corexy printer. its either vertical cartesian or an hbot. 2 motors at the back with remote toolhead on one belt would be hbot, and cartesian would with an x axis motor that travels with the axis in y. corexy has 2 belts in whole xy plane in a dual diagonal configuration.

  • @justinmorgan7851
    @justinmorgan7851 9 месяцев назад +45

    My predictions:
    * Bambu will come out with an "advanced" AMS that can also work as a filament dryer, and the slicer will be able to programmatically start/finish a drying cycle before a print run begins
    * Bambu will come out with a larger format printer, i.e, bigger than 256^3
    * Bambu will solidify its hold as the "Apple" of 3D printers as more mainstream people begin 3D printing and don't want to tinker with their printers (it should "just work" when you hit Print)
    * Bambu will really start to dominate even more than in 2023
    * In desperation, some other companies will start to copy Bambu's strategy

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +51

      You didn't really mention bambu much, did you forget about them?

    • @Nerlin
      @Nerlin 9 месяцев назад +3

      What about a Bambu Tool Changer Printer to compete with the XL?

    • @justinmorgan7851
      @justinmorgan7851 9 месяцев назад

      @@LostInTech3D lol

    • @MetalheadAndNerd
      @MetalheadAndNerd 9 месяцев назад +9

      Meanwhile RatRig will continue to sell incomplete kits where the buyer has to source lots of important and expensive parts by himself for as much as a Bambu Lab printer.

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 9 месяцев назад +3

      I agree with you on those. 3D printing is finally moving for cheap Chinese crap you need to tinker on, to more professional but still affordble.

  • @Rievven
    @Rievven 9 месяцев назад +16

    I want to see multi material advancements.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +1

      Same. Nothing on the radar though 😴

    • @PointBlank65
      @PointBlank65 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@LostInTech3D watching the last few years of Voron developments making their way to the consumer market, I feel we are at the beginning of tool changing.
      Lots of buzz around the 2.4 and Trident mods

    • @martinskamla6789
      @martinskamla6789 9 месяцев назад

      @@LostInTech3Dcreality claims there will be in 2024
      So I expect it to launch with the K2 printers

  • @snugglesjuggler
    @snugglesjuggler 8 месяцев назад +2

    I bought my first 3D printer two weeks ago and that was the Bambu Labs P1S.
    It just works. And that is what I wanted. No nerdy fiddling or need for 1000 reddit forum reads.
    How long will it last? For how long will I be able to buy spare parts? Those are the questions to be answered.

  • @primate2744
    @primate2744 8 месяцев назад +1

    I don't really care much for multi color. I've been running enders mostly for years with good results, but also with the usual tweaking to keep them going properly. What I'd really like is a solid workhorse printer that just prints well all the time but doesn't cost $1200.

  • @aaroneckardt5514
    @aaroneckardt5514 8 месяцев назад +2

    I am not a fan of “color” printing. But multi material printing I am 100% behind. Multiple material printing is the difference between a consumer printer and an industrial printer. Many times when you are engineering parts. You need the abilities of different material in the same part. Ability to use a different material is the difference between an end use part and a static prototype. Majority of my designs should be used with 2 materials and 2 support material.

  • @Gryfang451
    @Gryfang451 9 месяцев назад +3

    If you're selling filament, the Bambu single nozzle AMS unit definitely helps you do that! I predict that Filament companies like Sunlu will bring AMS style systems to the masses for Klipper based printers. If you can waste half your filament printing purge rather than model, you have increased the amount of filament purchased. If you can make the spool just proprietary enough to where it is inconvenient to use others, then most people will buy your filament. If your system will work with almost any printer with a simple addition to control it with a USB cable and maybe a few printable mounting parts, then you could rule the roost right now. Companies that already make filamament and dryers are in a fairly good position to do this.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад

      Haha interesting theory, don't tell them or they totally will

    • @chrisalbertson5838
      @chrisalbertson5838 8 месяцев назад

      Your plan is foiled by the newer ERCF V2.0 that puts a filament sensor in the print head. Now you can only waste what does not come out when you do a retract.

  • @thedamnone
    @thedamnone 9 месяцев назад +30

    There's already a standard for spool sizes. It's the DIN EN:ISO 544 standard for welding wire spools and many manufacturers use it.

    • @jacobbabcock8943
      @jacobbabcock8943 8 месяцев назад

      Yea he means more manufactures will actually start following standards

  • @dingdongdaddy589
    @dingdongdaddy589 9 месяцев назад +6

    I have a trumpet. Shoulda hit me up.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +4

      noted for next time, it won't be long trust me

    • @dingdongdaddy589
      @dingdongdaddy589 9 месяцев назад +1

      👊🏽🤣👍🏽

  • @PureRushXevus
    @PureRushXevus 9 месяцев назад +12

    _me, with the same ender 3 pro (heavily modified) and modified Tronxy X5SA I bought years ago, barely used in the last year_
    "interesting, interesting" :d

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +1

      to be honest sometimes its better to just watch :)

    • @PureRushXevus
      @PureRushXevus 9 месяцев назад

      budget machines have come a long way, that's for sure. if I start getting back into it and get disposable income, maybe I'll get some of these more complete machines :)@@LostInTech3D

    • @2mD
      @2mD 9 месяцев назад

      Same here
      I finished modding my ender3pro, and it can print everything I want/need. So there isn't any incentive to buy a new one.

  • @larryb.6334
    @larryb.6334 9 месяцев назад +5

    They took our linear motors! :D
    Here is my 2024 prediction: Linear motor 3d printers!

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад

      eehhhhh most engineers I spoke to seem unimpressed with the idea. We'll see!

    • @instertcreativename
      @instertcreativename 9 месяцев назад

      This would make me cry

    • @MetalheadAndNerd
      @MetalheadAndNerd 9 месяцев назад

      Could linear motors provide the needed precision?

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 9 месяцев назад

      @@MetalheadAndNerd Hmm good question. I don´t think they will really be a thing. I also don´t think they will have a huge advantage.

  • @Andyah
    @Andyah 9 месяцев назад +3

    more idex printers would be nice to see out there under 2024.

    • @theX24968Z
      @theX24968Z 8 месяцев назад

      or just printers with multiple extruders like ultimaker's printers

  • @josephwisniewski3673
    @josephwisniewski3673 8 месяцев назад +1

    My 2024 predictions: we will see a prewired, preassembled bedslinger with a fold down gantry. Take it out of the box, unlatch the gantry, swing it up to operating position, latch, and print. It may have either a handle or an easy-to-handle carrying case.
    4 or 5 axis printers will move from grad-school projects to at least one production model.
    Someone will take advantage of all that incredible clipper speed and better anti-string algorithms to drop their "normal" nozzle from 0.4mm to 0.2mm, and reduce typical layer heights from 0.1mm to 0.05mm, making for considerably more detailed prints.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  8 месяцев назад

      You just described the fookos :)

  • @zrizzy6958
    @zrizzy6958 9 месяцев назад +18

    I think this year will lead to more standardised recycling, and cheaper fillament (if shipnation will succeed in his plans, other companies may lower their prices)

    • @pusnirizda5481
      @pusnirizda5481 9 месяцев назад +1

      Be honest, almost no one cares about recycling. Especially not in china, which produces basically 99% of 3dprinters and related stuff. And even if one care - i just can't imagine cheap reliable system that not takes too many time to actually be useful.

    • @FlorinPopescu35
      @FlorinPopescu35 9 месяцев назад +2

      Honestly I would love for this to be true!

    • @AerialWaviator
      @AerialWaviator 9 месяцев назад +1

      Problem with (filament) recycling is shipping cost, and logistics of handling different types of filament material. For recycling to succeed it need volume, and to be fairly local. Though challenges.

    • @zrizzy6958
      @zrizzy6958 9 месяцев назад +5

      I meant recycling at home

    • @BokBarber
      @BokBarber 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@pusnirizda5481 They'd care about it if they could buy a relatively cheap machine that you put scrap in and get more filament out.

  • @creativitybyph
    @creativitybyph 9 месяцев назад +2

    I hope that there will be a big development in driers, living and working in southeren Sweden we iften have high humidity and printing with 4.5kg, 8kg and 15kg spools there are no efficient AND affordable way to dry and keep a spool dry during the print

  • @gitss7367
    @gitss7367 9 месяцев назад +6

    I think I prefer to pass on Klipper for the foreseeable future. Should I want faster speeds and input shaping marlin supports that now also.

    • @MetalheadAndNerd
      @MetalheadAndNerd 9 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah, sometimes simplicity and the ability ro quickly modify the firmware is more important than a flashy UI.

    • @Ubiquities
      @Ubiquities 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@MetalheadAndNerd not for nothing, I have a printer on Marlin and one on Klipper, the only reason they both aren’t on Klipper is because I had a kid, and my printers have been collecting dust.
      With Klipper you don’t flash updates, you just modify a config file and press save, it’s insanely convenient.

    • @ScarfmonsterWR
      @ScarfmonsterWR 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@MetalheadAndNerdWhat do you mean by modifying firmware? Do you mean settings? If so, that doesn't make much sense since in klipper it's faster and easier to change settings than in marlin.

    • @MetalheadAndNerd
      @MetalheadAndNerd 6 месяцев назад

      @@ScarfmonsterWR If you don't know what modifying firmware means you probably shouldn't judge what is easier, better or makes sense.

  • @gamergamer5345
    @gamergamer5345 7 месяцев назад +1

    standardizing reel dimensions makes so much sense, there should be a DIN or ISO for those

  • @Liberty4Ever
    @Liberty4Ever 8 месяцев назад +1

    What I'd to see in 2024:
    Better extruders on consumer grade 3D printers. The extruders from Sovol, Creality, Elegoo, et al are much better than a few years ago, but not nearly as good as the many after market designs and implementations. Rather than a $39 extruder assembly, I think most of us would rather have an extruder with better performance, greater reliability and longer service life for twice the price. The extruder assembly is the heart of a 3D printer and isn't getting enough attention by the manufacturers that seem to make something that'll print 2000 hours of PLA and that's good enough. Even worse, the extruder assemblies are very proprietary making it impossible to buy an after market extruder upgrade for a new printer, or any printer with an installed base under 100,000.
    Stop reskinning a two year old version of Cura and pretending you are supplying your own slicer. Ship your printers with profiles for Cura, PrusaSlicer and OrcaSlicer, including generic versions of all popular filament types. Product launches are always rushed, so keep upgrading those profiles on the 3D printer manufacturer's website, and work closely with the open source community to have the open source slicers fully support your printers.
    Stop skipping Kripple Klipper printers. Use the full open source Klipper so we have access to all of the features. The printer specific issues should all be managed with config files and macros. Concerns about naive new users screwing up their printer by changing behind the scenes Klipper can be addressed by having a simple procedure to restore the 3D printer to factory defaults.
    We're getting better (fancier, feature rich, prettier) new consumer printers but we still need a good small print farm printer for small businesses. I should be able to buy a solid, low maintenance and very durable printer, use it to prototype a product, then buy eight more of the same printer for the factory floor without needing to hire a full time employee to maintain those eight printers.
    Lower cost commodity filament, packaged without a reel. We shouldn't be throwing away a large plastic reel for every kg of filament. The reel cores should be relatively small and easily recyclable and we should buy refills for our reusable reels. Filament should be sold in standard 1 kg and 3 kg refills. It's crazy that every filament manufacturer uses whatever reels they like and there are no filament packaging standards that would result in much better reel holders and filament dryers.
    The 3D printing industry thinks of TPU/TPE as flexible, and it is, so the focus is on reliably extruding lower durometer 1.75 +/- 0.03 mm filament and making a 3D printer extruder that can print it reliably, but TPU has other benefits. Inter layer bonding is excellent. It adheres well to most print bed surfaces without heat and peels off after printing. It's very resistant to UV and most chemicals. It has vastly superior impact resistance. Use 4+ perimeter layers and 25+% infill and 95A TPU parts are solid. I wish filament manufacturers made much higher durometer TPU/TPE for solid nearly indestructible parts that have all of the above benefits while making a filament that is much faster and easier to print, with better print quality.

  • @Venaloid
    @Venaloid 9 месяцев назад +3

    11:18 - Is it really user driven, or is it something users will tolerate because all companies want to go in that direction and they're willing to push us? In smartphones, no one wanted a non-removable battery or a missing headphone jack, but manufacturers universally did, so they pushed it onto us.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +1

      both of those are versions of the same thing - if nobody makes a fuss and everyone still buys the same amount, but it works in the company's favour - it's user driven.

    • @Venaloid
      @Venaloid 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@LostInTech3D - That's fair I guess, it just seems like a useful distinction to make: attracting users with a new feature seems a bit different from simply not repelling users with said feature, even if users are supporting the product in both cases.

  • @donkeyholmes4581
    @donkeyholmes4581 9 месяцев назад +4

    Colour printing is just a waste of time and material for anyone who finishes their prints (sanding, painting and weathering). I’d like to see an enclosed printer with a decent sized bed.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +9

      I dont disagree with you. I would like to see more multimaterial so we can leverage actual material properties, rather than colouring stuff.

    • @benjaminford8173
      @benjaminford8173 9 месяцев назад

      I love my Qidi X-Max 3, its got a 325mm X 325mm bed.

    • @pureiso567
      @pureiso567 9 месяцев назад +2

      I agree for those who finish prints, but I will say I am in the camp of ain't going to do that and live with the color it printed in. I am still waiting for a much less wasteful multi-color setup...

    • @2mD
      @2mD 9 месяцев назад +1

      voron phoenix
      Its not gonna be cheap, but its big, enclosed and idex :D

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@LostInTech3D We have to differentiate more between multi material which is useful and multi color which is a gimmick in FDM at best.

  • @mouserr
    @mouserr 9 месяцев назад +1

    'this bit' has been the long anticipated breakthrough. multicolor without the hassle and yup thatll sell

  • @forivall
    @forivall 9 месяцев назад +3

    If I google "define niche" and click on the pronunciation, it pronounces it "niCH". But with the query you used, it says "neesh". Weird.

  • @filanfyretracker
    @filanfyretracker 9 месяцев назад +8

    I do not think reskinned slicers will go away, while I can imagine a company could be tempted to do it in house I think the harsh reality is people expect Prusa or Cura based. Especially since lots of tutorials for slicing lean on one of those. And to keep the overall community happy I guess instead of Prusa I should say Slic3r based and Cura.
    Orca Slicer might become a new big dog on the Slic3r based slicer side of things though. it seems to be integrating a lot of the best from Bambu and Prusa additions to the source.

    • @Etrehumain123
      @Etrehumain123 8 месяцев назад

      Also doing a competent slicer looks like an incredible amount of work, while you have a open source one on the market easy to reskin

    • @chrisalbertson5838
      @chrisalbertson5838 8 месяцев назад

      I only see cosmetic changes to slicers. I'd like to see something more funimental with the methods they use to make prints. For those making structural parts, I'd like to see an easy why so specify internal structure that is different in different parts of the print. For example an area of 60% infill then slowly blends to 15% or whatever. or 6 walls in one areas and 2 walls in some other. What about calibrated holes. I print a hole and measure it and tell the slicer and then the slicer compensates automatically

  • @AndrewAHayes
    @AndrewAHayes 9 месяцев назад +3

    I liked the analogy to the console market, at the start everyone and their grandmother made a pong machine and then it was just a few cartridge based manufacturers and then even fewer cd based manufacturers

  • @oldsjunkie1
    @oldsjunkie1 7 месяцев назад +1

    Gonna be a lot of tears when Bambu shits the bed...

  • @martinskamla6789
    @martinskamla6789 9 месяцев назад +3

    I absolutely need more multicolor but more importantly multi material solutions
    It completely skyrocketed sales for me
    Things having colored parts just looks much more professional and people but products more …..

  • @kaytrim
    @kaytrim 9 месяцев назад +1

    I agree that Bamboo is flying out of the factory because of their AMS. Multi color printing will make 3d printing more mainstream.

  • @Tottorul
    @Tottorul 7 месяцев назад

    This has to be the future: toolhead change and larger printbeds like the XL along with more accurate printing to make sure you get less warping so larger prints will not fail as often. A bit longer perspecctive is more camera and lidar observation technology of the printing process to make sure everything is printing as it should and also potentially to be able to adjust the print itself if lidar is able to help calculate new trajectories for prints on the fly

  • @AerialWaviator
    @AerialWaviator 9 месяцев назад +2

    I don't think the market is demanding more integration between machines and software; rather the market is shifting towards products that offer a better overall "user experience".
    Part of Bambu success over the last year has been their ability to improve the user experience, particularly for newer users to 3d printing. Unfortunately this means more closed sourced software, and a trend towards paid service offerings. Any vender offering open source (or partial open source) solution will have an advantage, as it allows hobbyists to contribute to the to evolution of 3d printing. This is a model that has worked well for Prusa historically.

    • @theX24968Z
      @theX24968Z 8 месяцев назад

      those hobbyists free hard work will be greatly appreciated by the companies' profit margains.

  • @samuelmiller916
    @samuelmiller916 9 месяцев назад +5

    Personally, the two big things i want to see from consumer 3d printers is the ability to take out the USB while its printing and have the file stored on the printer like what I see from companies like stratasys and the ability to have closed loop stepper motors although I think that would only be for the more expensive consumer printers.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +1

      Hmm yeah seems obvious doesn't it

    • @MetalheadAndNerd
      @MetalheadAndNerd 9 месяцев назад

      You mean printers where the file is on an SD card? I believe they already exist.

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 9 месяцев назад

      You can, I do that with my Flashforge 5M.

    • @bluerider0988
      @bluerider0988 9 месяцев назад

      Stratasys isn't even in the conversation as far as I'm concerned with the consumer market. When your cheapest printer is like 30 grand and you can only use their filament and hardware at astronomical prices, and oh yeah, if your want the machine to continue to work don't forget about the maintenance package you need to pay yearly.
      Their printers are nice, but in another universe for cost. I'm not sure how even in this day and age where nobody wants to learn anything how they are still in business.

    • @samuelmiller916
      @samuelmiller916 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@bluerider0988 oh sorry if it was misunderstood but I don't mean stratasys is in the consumer market (far from that). I mean it was the first example that popped into my head since we have stratasys printers at work but I do use a mk4 at home with a few other printers which I would love that feature to be implemented on.

  • @caittastic
    @caittastic 9 месяцев назад +2

    i dont think ill ever buy a new printer

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +1

      As long as the kingroon works you don't need to 🤷‍♂️

  • @smorris12
    @smorris12 9 месяцев назад +8

    Boring video idea: To save learning our way around the PCBway website and being disappointed at the quote, could you do a video covering PCBway's various offerings to give an idea of what they charge? eg is a minimum number of simple 5x5 PCBs £1400? Or a milled aluminium part for an automated googly-eye placer is only £2.75? Or is a bent plate tin-foil hat mould actually £156,000,000,000.34?
    Keep up the good work!

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +8

      I could if there's enough demand and people won't yell at me for being a corporate shill 🤣👍

    • @smorris12
      @smorris12 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@LostInTech3D Pffft, you're a paid shill already, just get them to pay you more to showcase their stuff fully! 😉 I actually think it'd be useful to the practical sorts of people you must attract. I've seen enough of their ads to know what they do, but enough "POA"s flash up to stop me bothering to find out if it's likely to make me shake the moths out of the wallet and use them!

  • @MisterkeTube
    @MisterkeTube 9 месяцев назад +1

    My Ender 3 can do 1000mm/s. Even accelleration on it can be ridiculously high ... the question is how much control you then still have over that movement. Low mass on the moving parts is a must for high (well controlled) acceleration and high acceleration is a must for actually reaching high speeds (and still being able to slow down again to take sharp corners). What Bambu still needs to get: larger size (maybe they'll first get that on a bed-slinger) and ... tool changing. I think Bambu can simplify and optimize tool changing compared to what Prusa has on the XL, with fully automated tool alignment and lower BOM cost.

  • @DaveTimperley
    @DaveTimperley 9 месяцев назад +2

    My prediction for 2024...
    Induction driven multi nozzel head with fan moved to somewhere else on the printer and cooling fed by umbilical.

  • @benrojas5444
    @benrojas5444 9 месяцев назад +4

    Creality is going to release an AMS type system for their K1 printers, you saw it here first

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +1

      Probably, eventually. Not soon though I don't think

    • @henninghoefer
      @henninghoefer 9 месяцев назад

      That would be extremely difficult, because the K1 line doesn't have a filament cutter in the print head.
      Qidi on the other hand have copied Bambu almost verbatim, so they could possibly do it.
      Phrozen has already announced their Bambu clone "Arco" with an AMS.
      I agree with @@LostInTech3D here, it's unlikely for the K1. Creality style would be anyway, to just release a K2 next year... 😄

  • @Tankbrusher
    @Tankbrusher 9 месяцев назад +1

    In resin we will find more auto-fillers, heating becoming a main-stream thing, more linux boards, wifi and nominal resolution will shift from 35um to sub 20um for small-screen, mid-tier machines.

  • @jenspetersen5865
    @jenspetersen5865 8 месяцев назад +1

    I expect a slew of printers based on the Bambulab X1C setup but with much larger print volumes. There are now a bunch of 600mm and 800mm printers and I hope they get good

  • @TheMidnight366366
    @TheMidnight366366 8 месяцев назад +1

    My predictions are Creality is going to make a bedslinger with Klipper out of the box finally and we'll have a proper release of a 5 axis. And maybe we'll see another belt driven as I'm only aware of one being commercially produced.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  8 месяцев назад

      I've been suggesting heavily to creality that they try to do this.

  • @FilamentStories
    @FilamentStories 8 месяцев назад

    I’m here for the sheet metal cutting and folding in 2024. Bring it on.

  • @AckzaTV
    @AckzaTV 6 месяцев назад

    i bought a $160 walmart cnc to assemble and use because yes i also want to go from 3dprinting to cnc, and ti also wanna make my own pcb qway board too man very exciting journey,. i cant wait to machine my own aluminum keychains

  • @mattd5136
    @mattd5136 9 месяцев назад +1

    I'm going to disagree with you on the dryer front - the proliferation of direct drive enclosed machines (AKA Bambu Labs X1C & copies) makes printing with filaments from the engineering end of the spectrum almost easy.
    These plastics greatly benefit from drying temperatures well beyond 70°C, especially if you don't want to to dry them for a week. Maybe in 2025 we'll get to dryers that aren't 20°C colder at the top of the chamber than the heating element exhaust...

  • @FroggWizzard
    @FroggWizzard 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you for showing everyone how to say niche. It always peeves me when someone says it wrong XD

  • @John_Mack
    @John_Mack 8 месяцев назад +1

    I think you missed one major thing... AI. Imagine the slicer analyzing the model and knowing exactly how to get the best print. As AI is going to be embedded into everything (like it or not) I see it as being huge in 3d printing.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  8 месяцев назад +1

      Meh. 😂

    • @bren8k
      @bren8k 8 месяцев назад

      😂@@LostInTech3D

  • @PCBWay
    @PCBWay 8 месяцев назад

    Happy New Year, everyone !🥳🥳

  • @calledout4437
    @calledout4437 5 месяцев назад

    Good Lord, I made the mistake of buying a Geeetech Thunder for almost $500 1 year ago. It's now a paper weight just sitting on the shelf that won't print a solid part to save its life. What a huge mistake and it pisses me off to this day.

  • @babbagebrassworks4278
    @babbagebrassworks4278 7 месяцев назад

    Klipper is great for FDM, it gives options and open source tweaking capabilies. If there was something for UV Resin......

  • @owned323
    @owned323 8 месяцев назад

    You mentioned that you don't need 70c-80c to dry filament. While you absolutely don't need those temps for regular PLA or PETG maybe even ABS. For Nylon you absolutely do. Especially fiberous nylons like glass fiber and carbon fiber infused filament. Those materials are incredibly hygroscopic and drying them through and through takes quite a bit of time and a fair amount of heat, usually more than 70C for best case scenarios. I have a ton of dryers and printers for my farm and my dryers that don't exceed a chamber temp of 60C do not perform well, even with fans added and other mods. I am now to the point I feed my vorons and bambus straight out of a couple S4s that stay at 70C 24/7

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  8 месяцев назад

      you may want to consider some external humidity control as it might work out cheaper

  • @Thepitbull9911
    @Thepitbull9911 8 месяцев назад

    Very Nice Wrap Up of the Year. 2024 I agree with you. The market will probably go bedslinger for BEGINNER, BUDGET, LEARNER printers for cheap "Get them Printing" type printers. Then core XY as the "Next Step Up" "READY to Print" "hands free" type printers.
    Just hope the 3d company's stop rushing out units to be first to the Market. Remember Prusa's Tried and True "I am 3D Print." Make it work for 2024!

  • @beauregardslim1914
    @beauregardslim1914 9 месяцев назад

    Niche: A German philosopher famous for his concept of the "Superman". ;-)

  • @lajoyalobos2009
    @lajoyalobos2009 8 месяцев назад +1

    Reskinned slicers: probably inevitable like you said but still... 🤮
    Standard spool sizes: standards for these kind of things is always a good idea
    I think filament costs will potentially go down (if not this year then next). Slant 3D is on a mission to produce quality PLA filament for $10 USD/kg. The price is planned to be stepped down until they reach the goal, as they work out the manufacturing processes. If they succeed or nearly succeed, it'll be a driving force for other filament manufacturers to try to hit the same target to compete. If PLA can come down in price, some of the other common materials will as well.

  • @drxym
    @drxym 8 месяцев назад

    I sold my fairly modded Ender 3 Pro for €80 and got a Bambu P1S. Mostly happy with the change although I look forward to the day where someone drops in a replacement mainboard running klipper or something that I can print direct to the thing, and still use AMS etc. but without going through the cloud.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  8 месяцев назад

      you can use lan mode as is, but I get what you mean

  • @3dPrintingMillennial
    @3dPrintingMillennial 8 месяцев назад

    Filament markup truly is ridiculous. For instance, pure PC is $29kg. Meanwhile, PC-CF ranges from $35-$150. Carbon fiber is not that expensive to add nor expensive in cost.

  • @Sulfuron41
    @Sulfuron41 9 месяцев назад +1

    I absolutely would love to see filament reels not only standardize, but increase the "refill" availability. I absolutely HATE cardboard reels. They suck!!! They're always wobbly, make tons of dust, and easily get damaged. Refills are the perfect solution. Reuse the reels!!!!!!

  • @Twikiy
    @Twikiy 9 месяцев назад +1

    I gess i was expecting to much for 2024?
    -estandar heated chamber in closed printers
    -inductive hotends
    -refills for asa, pp, pc, and pa
    -more colors for asa, pp, pc, and pa

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад

      Never know, but I haven't seen any indication of inductive hotends at all.

    • @andreas.grundler
      @andreas.grundler 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@LostInTech3D Plasmics showed an inductive hotend at Formnext.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад

      hasnt that been doing the rounds for a couple years tho?

    • @Twikiy
      @Twikiy 9 месяцев назад

      @@LostInTech3D the refills? i only see asa refills in black.
      the colors, i only see natural, black, and withe colores por PP, PC, and PA. and for asa only 3 or 4 colors per brand. Except polymaker, but is dificult to find PolyLite asa in my region (Spain, Europe) i only know of 3djake that have it. I know this is dificult, because consumers only go up to asa, and dont use pp, pc, and pa.

  • @KannaKamui
    @KannaKamui 8 месяцев назад

    4:51 - not really, most buy bambu's due to the ease of use. Bambu is making printers as close as they can to a appliance like a digital microwave. Plug it in, works.
    I say this as one who got a A1 for this reason. The AMS is a big plus, but not what drove me to it.

  • @CoffeeTech101
    @CoffeeTech101 9 месяцев назад +1

    The reason why bambu's are selling so well is more to do with the software and how well tuned they are to the hardware.
    Bambu's just print well period. I've had an A1 for about 3 weeks now and the thing just cranks out beautiful pieces.

  • @babbagebrassworks4278
    @babbagebrassworks4278 7 месяцев назад

    Resin pumps are a cool idea, wonder how I can print one, ha ha.

  • @tomtomkowski7653
    @tomtomkowski7653 8 месяцев назад

    The next video: the best printers of 2023 in different price segments from beginners friendly to hardcore :)

  • @tomtaylor135
    @tomtaylor135 9 месяцев назад +1

    Ender Switchwire clone?
    I updated mine with the Kevin-aka-Sam belted z. Love it.

  • @rentaspoon219
    @rentaspoon219 9 месяцев назад

    Happy New Year

  • @theX24968Z
    @theX24968Z 8 месяцев назад

    the only thing the prusa XL needs is an enclosure. after that point, and some additional bambu style user friendliness, I wont need much more for a WHILE

  • @espressomatic
    @espressomatic 8 месяцев назад

    Closed source printers are going to drive growth and Bambu is going to outsell everyone in 2024. IMO, the "next big thing" in hobby/home printing could be 5-axis - but it won't be in 2024.

  • @Walldodger
    @Walldodger 6 месяцев назад +1

    Do you have any more info regarding the new Prusa Mini?

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  6 месяцев назад +1

      it's pure speculation :) nothing yet, who knows

  • @FlorinPopescu35
    @FlorinPopescu35 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for the niche pronunciation! Darn other youtubers making me doubt myself!

  • @BennyTygohome
    @BennyTygohome 9 месяцев назад

    2024 , the year my 2023 Eibos3D Polyphemus preorder will eventually ship

  • @leinadreign3510
    @leinadreign3510 6 месяцев назад

    An upgrade for my prusa mini would be awesome!

  • @---ey6hj
    @---ey6hj 9 месяцев назад +2

    I’m hoping for better and cheaper 3d scanners, then I can make my kids superhero masks that fit. Then they can go fight each other and leave me to my beer and watching Matlock reruns

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +2

      have you tried using a phone app?

    • @---ey6hj
      @---ey6hj 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@LostInTech3D holy hashtag I never even knew that was a thing you could do with your phone, I’ll check it out, thanks for the suggestion! I really need to stop watching Matlock

  • @Gorilla_Jones
    @Gorilla_Jones 8 месяцев назад

    The future? HUGE printers. Loving my Comgrow T500s.

  • @CatchMeNever
    @CatchMeNever 9 месяцев назад +1

    I die a little inside when I hear people say “nitch” instead of niche

  • @enteranon3342
    @enteranon3342 7 месяцев назад

    I understand why everyone wants fast printers but that's not all. I have a modded Ender 3 Pro with 100 mods. It prints perfectly at 90mms and it's extremely quiet. I can watch videos. I can sleep next to it without I think I have one Washing machine next to my bed It should be important that the printers are fast but also quiet. I don't need a leaf blower that blows around my ears

  • @anoukk_
    @anoukk_ 8 месяцев назад

    To me the multimaterial part isn't why I would want a bambu printer. It's knowing I can just plug it in and print.

  • @skaltura
    @skaltura 9 месяцев назад +1

    Kingroon offers 10kg PLA for 85$ shipped in europe this holiday. Sooo tempting, but ...

  • @802Garage
    @802Garage 9 месяцев назад +5

    I'm still going to LMAO if Bambu makes a larger A1 before a larger P1/X1 hahaha.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +4

      They totally will

    • @andreas.grundler
      @andreas.grundler 9 месяцев назад +5

      Wasn't there something about "No more bedslingers"? 🤪

    • @henninghoefer
      @henninghoefer 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@andreas.grundler Oh yes there was! In fact, it's still on their website for the X1... 😂

    • @florianmaslofski
      @florianmaslofski 9 месяцев назад

      it kind of makes sense too. Get the low end big boy for v1, then the guys who are at the top end of the bambu lab ecosystem go for it to have the size capability, then you update the P and X to v2, giving them a big step forward in quality, so theyll also go for those, before then combining both size and quality on the v2 level to end it again. that way you never have a jack of all trades, but rather specific SKUs to target different things, while giving the new thing a clear advantage

    • @omegadeepblue1407
      @omegadeepblue1407 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@andreas.grundlerlooks like they changed their plan in order to compete against the Ender 3 V3, the Kobra's and the Neptune's
      A bigger bedslinger makes sense since Bambu Lab needs it to compete against the Kobra 2 Max

  • @bozthescrewup410
    @bozthescrewup410 8 месяцев назад

    Hopefully resin printers can just become more hands off. I hate using mine.

  • @MrWoowootila
    @MrWoowootila 9 месяцев назад +1

    Bambu will come out with a XL printer. My prediction.

  • @Marijuanajoseph
    @Marijuanajoseph 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hopeful prediction: people will figure out that throwing half of every spool they buy into the trash just to print things they can buy at the dollar store isn't a good thing.
    pessimist prediction: every printer manufacturer will make their own multi color landfill generator.

  • @pyro9973
    @pyro9973 8 месяцев назад

    I can give you an prediction on Resin printers, I can comfortably say that companies are gonna shift to adding a heater inside their SLA printers since most are printing ABS Resin and ABS as we know in the FDM word tend to warp if it's not heated enough. A lot of SLA Printers have this issue with warping so this is a safe call.

    • @Victor-vj5ds
      @Victor-vj5ds 8 месяцев назад

      Except the resins used arnt actually ABS, its just something similar in chemical properties, isnt the warping issue do to moisture in the filament or are you talking about warping of the structure?

  • @Wm200
    @Wm200 8 месяцев назад

    Will 2024 be the year HP finally hits the home market?!

  • @mrcpu9999
    @mrcpu9999 7 месяцев назад +1

    There won't be any real improvements for years. Just more slightly upgraded machines and more people jumping on the bambu-style bandwagon. But actual revolutionary improvement requires investment, and nobody's going to do that for free anymore. One of the big guys will make some significant changes and only release it for their brand of printers, and so will start the fragmentation of the entire printing industry, with every man for himself. Happens in software, happened with Internet, happened with browsers, and FDM printing's time is coming.

  • @robblincoln2152
    @robblincoln2152 9 месяцев назад

    1. Work will continue on making printing resin less toxic but they will not solve it next year.
    2. FDM recycling option will explode next year, but won’t become truly viable until the industry transitions to PDK based filaments.
    3. Prusa (sadly) will give up on open source.
    4. Consumer printer will continue to cut away at the low level professional printers.
    5. Semi automated post processing will become a thing.

    • @josefmuller86
      @josefmuller86 7 месяцев назад

      3. Is not realistic because that would be cutting the branch you're sitting on. Except for the open source there is no other reason to buy a prusa, since it is a mid-range product, someone who has the money for it is surely willing to spend a little more $ for a plug-and-play printer, while people who cant afford it will just buy those cheap ~$150 printers.
      What is more plausible that Prusa pulls an IBM move and there wont be any new consumer prusa printers and there will be only for large scale printing since it seems where the r&d of prusa is heading.

  • @Etrehumain123
    @Etrehumain123 8 месяцев назад

    He was, in fact, not Qiding

  • @soft-conf
    @soft-conf Месяц назад

    thank you for telling people how to pronounce niche

  • @benjaminmathon7417
    @benjaminmathon7417 9 месяцев назад

    The thing I want to see is LW-PLA with carbon fiber

  • @aspectcontext
    @aspectcontext 9 месяцев назад +1

    Are you counting the K1C in the Creality prediction to solve the K1/Max shortcomings, because that seems rather imminent based on recent leaks and the Formnext video. Good overall set of predictions.

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +1

      the K1C is already way past the leak stage I think! I was kinda rolling it in to the K1 since as you say, just a fixed K1 really. I should be getting one.

    • @aspectcontext
      @aspectcontext 9 месяцев назад

      Makes sense! I’ve wondered myself recently whether Creality will adopt a K* nomenclature or just keep going through their adjective soup to describe variants like they’ve done with the Ender series even more so as of late.

  • @seraaron
    @seraaron 7 месяцев назад +1

    You can't lecture us on how to say 'niche' and then immediately say 'sneaked' instead of 'snuck' lol

  • @bgrant1512
    @bgrant1512 8 месяцев назад

    Im waiting for a Bambo Labs carbon with 500mm x 500mm bed

    • @jenspetersen5865
      @jenspetersen5865 8 месяцев назад

      Waiting for something that is asymmetrical like 256x768
      I really need a Bambu that prints 600mm long objects for engineering in multi materials

  • @Axelvad
    @Axelvad 6 месяцев назад

    Wich printer is the best to buy if you want reliability and reproducability and fine detail gor machine parts and ability to print with metal and nylon. No need for color.

  • @Tome4kkkk
    @Tome4kkkk 7 месяцев назад

    I don't think Klipper is worth it in the budget segment. You had decent $200 choices like sovol sv06 and suddenly you're facing $400 by wanting to go to eleven.

  • @muddymaker3721
    @muddymaker3721 9 месяцев назад

    Haven't you heard? In the third quarter of 2024 Prusa are going to be releasing a new core XY machine with an inbuilt MMU that has a similar size bed as the MK3 series printer? Expect delivery around the first half of 2026!

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад +1

      Are you making this up🤣

  • @tormodnicholasmortontorger205
    @tormodnicholasmortontorger205 9 месяцев назад

    I've never understood why go Kliper on budget printers? I totally love my cheap Elegoo Neptune 3 pro, it prints just as good as my Prusa, and yes its marlin, but super stable out of the box with no problem. But then again people rush to buy AMS also, something I really think should belong in the past. If we should have multifilament printers we should definitely learn from the CNC world and do toolswappers (like the xl)

  • @nathanbrehm1085
    @nathanbrehm1085 9 месяцев назад

    For resin printers they need to add heaters that can plug in like the air filters. End the need to add thermal bands or other diy heat solutions

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  9 месяцев назад

      I'm surprised they havent already, cant we just use fish tank heaters anyway

  • @crawlerin
    @crawlerin 9 месяцев назад

    IDEX may gain some traction.

  • @VikingRul3s
    @VikingRul3s 8 месяцев назад

    What are they saying? Pretty sure a dehumidifier still works as it did decades ago, but that see through picture made me think. Where is the cold part for the air to contract to/and "deposit" the water? So a "dryer" is just circulating hot air, basically a hair dryer in a box, but if it's all closed up, where is the humidity going then? Man this is making me confused, i thought they where mini dehumidifiers, with some small open plate under to evaporate the water (like a fridge)

    • @LostInTech3D
      @LostInTech3D  8 месяцев назад +1

      I think what you're asking is one of my biggest beefs with some dryers. I did a video on it actually a while back. You have to vent the air and replace it with new cold dry air.

    • @VikingRul3s
      @VikingRul3s 7 месяцев назад

      @@LostInTech3D I see, I'll go find that video then. Thanks 👍

  • @Happy3dprinting
    @Happy3dprinting 9 месяцев назад +3

    I would like to see more development into dealing with print waste, you mention multi material/colour printing waste is a major downside but lets face it there’s a lot more waste produced in supports as it is wider spread in the community and every printer user is having to deal with waste from fdm.
    It would be great either to have send back services and a credit system for every kilo of waste returned to a manufacturer. Home recycling into new filament from waste will never go mainstream due to them just wanting to sell you more filament, the cost or just serious hassle of trying a 3rd party filament manufacturing system is way out of most peoples reach.
    £500 off the shelf put plastic scrap in and get filament out unit would take the world by storm, and win a noble prize for saving the planet from a huge amount of landfill.