Too late, I’ve come from Reddit and I’m here to tell you to level your bed
Get an ABL and forget about having to do it yourself.
ABL works best when the bed is relatively planar and tram though, it can only do so much…
It’s an ongoing joke from the 3D printing subreddit-
Please be aware that this sub is not food-safe. STL please?
Automatic bed leveling?
If so, yes, do it, next to fixing some problematic hotend, it’s the best thing you can add to a 3D printer.
Oh, your part cooling fan is making a loud whining noise? Have you tried leveling your bed?
Have you tried leveling the community?
Just calibrated the communities e-steps and y’all, your extrusion is looking great.
Just wait for the 9,000th repetition of the same three posts and it’ll start getting sassy.
“Your print problems are almost certainly because you haven’t properly trammed and offset the bed.”
“PLA itself is foodsafe, filament additives may not be, and print texture is a bacteria farm.”
“Consensus starter printer in each price bracket right now is…” (actually not as obvious as it has been, some Ender3 variant and Bambu P1P? That one isn’t as tired as the other two because it changes over time.)
Lemmy in general has been much more pleasant, but we will have to be proactive to keep it this way
Agreed so here’s my reply to keep active user numbers high…
Agreed, much more pleasant here, though it felt empty for a while. Now it’s starting to feel active while still being pleasant. A big improvement over reddit.
My favorite was when some redditor told me that “maybe 3d printing isn’t for you” after I expressed some concerns. Pissed me off so much I ended up printing over 200 miniatures (so far).
How much does it cost you for 3d printing a miniature?
I use cheap resin, it’s roughly a dollar or two per mini. Gloves and supplies are cheap but add up over time. I haven’t calculated it with any precision, but it’s comfortably cheaper than buying them, and I can make small modifications to them.
That’s great, does your estimate include the electricity costs as well?
I would assume electricity costs are minimal for resin printers. I haven’t measured mine, but the only major power consumers in a resin printer are the Z axis motor and the UV LED. The UV LED isn’t continuously on and the Z axis doesn’t do a ton of movement. Compared to an FDM printer that is constantly running two heating elements and moving a heavy hotend all over the place, the power consumption should be a tiny fraction.
Reddit refugee here as well.
PLA ISNT FOODSAFE!
Thank you kind stranger. I keep seeing people on yourtube use it for animal bowls.
Typically the animals drinking from those bowls are not food, so it probably doesn’t have to be foodsafe?
oh god, now I’m confused again. I found multiple Articles saying both it is and is not food safe. Oh so food safe is safe for consumption, not eating out of, cheers
This is why we don’t want Reddit to completely die - we need all the A-holes to stay there and wallow in their misery.