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Holy crap, nice description.
Holy crap, nice description.
And the beanstalk
Chaotic Good
Sigh… Upvote
Looked into this myself, here’s a brief summary of my thoughts:
V2 has the flying gantry, Trident has the moving base. Primary difference is that since the base (i.e., print surface) is physically secured and rigid to the frame, bed meshes and other alignments should be more consistent. In other words, run a mesh once (or a few times for each of different bed temperatures) and never need to create the mesh again. All else being equal, the flying gantry is a more idealized option since the base in contact with the print is stationary, so very little force is ever seen by the model itself (short of small x and y forces while printing).
Now the trade off is the significantly added complexity of 4 independent z-motors supporting the gantry. In addition, this requires a gantry alignment macro each time the motors are powered off/on since the gantry sags asymmetrically if the motors aren’t locked (requiring power).
I have built a V2.4 and found it great, but I don’t know if I personally have found it worth it to have the fixed bed and additional motors. It’s nice to say I did, and it works, but if I needed to make another, I would absolutely go Trident. Cheaper and simpler, and it’s not an ideal world so many of the supposed benefits don’t really make a big difference.
I’m clamoring for more miak.
We need to accept a premium for the cleanest and safest baseload generation we have.
Probably guys from the same bike
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One Neun by a Cocodresser for me
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You can use modeling software (or even some slicers) to pre-position or stitch the parts in place.
Yeah incest needs to be bigger
Not if you clamp down on the defragulator, as shown in the picture
… Every day. Every now and again ain’t bad.
That is sad but nice. I left mine in a spinach field.
A lot of people who come into the museum do that, do they?