Your Recommendations Please
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Thanks for the feedback folks.
Regarding items manufactured in India;
@driven said:
are now made in India to a higher standard
This is true in some instances but completely the opposite in others. I have spent some time checking out products for sourcing to various industries and the variability was intimidating.
Also, if you need to get things OUT of India it can be equally tricky with layers of bureaucracy and shipping officials needing special payments. I know several people exporting from India (locals too) and they're often tearing their hair out not being able to get a container onto a boat.
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PS. The Sharebot KIWI http://www.3dhubs.com/3d-printers/sharebot-kiwi looks great for a tinkerer like me and the fact that it should be easier for me to mess with is encouraging.
Anyone got experience with them?
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Looking for a more in-depth review, then check out each of the individual printer pages."
http://www.3dhubs.com/3d-printersalso
I just updated the table above
added to list above - CraftBot_________________ FDM 20_0 x 25_0 x 20_0 cm $670_00 9_0
added "Here you can find all the 3D printers that received 5 or more reviews from our global community of Hubs. You can compare user ratings, reviews, prices, build volume and technology. Looking for a more in-depth review, then check out each of the individual printer pages."
Most of these are new machine, so review are limited.
I'm waiting myself to see what will change when HP start selling speed to the market place.
Our Moderators: d12dozr has years of experience of runing 3d printer hardware and software with sketchup, he will way in here soon.
Sketchup will export STL with a plug-in
Make sure your new machine accept STL file format if goning to work with sketchup.
In the USA ( or if you have google.com search under Shopping )
For pricing and buying check here:
3D printer 3d printers for sale with videos 3D printing google.com| search?q=3D printer
https://www.google.com/search?q=3D%20printer%203d%20printers%20for%20sale%20with%20videos%203D%20printing%20google.com/%20search?q=3D%20printer%26amp;sa=X%26amp;rls=com.microsoft:en-us:IE-ContextMenu%26amp;biw=1127%26amp;bih=852%26amp;tbs=vw:l,p_ord:r%26amp;tbm=shop%26amp;ei=BUWNVIH-IJDzoATZj4L4Bg%26amp;ved=0CHUQuw0oAA -
Hey Ash, I'd definitely recommend a well-known 3D printer like Printrbot or Ultimaker. This way you get a quality product and the online community you're looking for. Printrbot is a good beginner machine, and the best bang for your buck. I'd look at the Simple Metal edition for your needs. Ultimaker is a premium machine with excellent reviews all around.
Printrbot ships to India, and Ultimaker is on (backorder) India's self proclaimed 'largest 3D printing store'.
Both of these take generic filaments, so you're not stuck with pricey manufacturer's supplies.
I don't know anything specifically about turning a printer into a 2D profile cutter, but the Printrbot is definitely more open and 'hackable' so you'd probably have more luck with it. I have seen some cool mods done with Printerbots.
There are other printers that may work for you of course, but these are my recommendations from what I've learned over the last few years.
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Hey Printrbot has some great looking stuff.
In your experience, how necessary is the heated platform?
Was thinking about going the cheap route (since I have no idea what I'm doing) and going with this: http://printrbot.com/shop/simple-makers-kit/ what would be your reservations on that?
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Heated platform is nearly a must for printing ABS...just a nice-to-have for using PLA. Also note that ABS is more heat tolerant than PLA (PLA will melt/deform if left in a hot car) so ABS may be preferable in a hot climate. ABS has trouble sticking to a non-heated bed during printing.
I would be hesitant to use a wood frame in India because the humidity during the rainy season would have a tendency to warp the frame and throw off calibration...however India is a biiiig place so maybe there isn't a problem with humidity where you'll be?
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Hi All,
Thank for all your feedback. I nearly bought a printrbot till I found the huge price of getting it into India. Have been looking at local option inztead.
Divide by Zero appear nice but a little pricey for a firzt time buyer
Thought on the folloing optionz appreciated:
http://www.diy-india.com/store/159-pruasi3-acrylic-edition-makers-kit-aka-woodmax-i3-v2.html
Can you tell hich keyz are broken on my keyboard?
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Looks like you need a W & S...if you had your printer, you could just 3D print some new ones
The first link you posted does not look good. The kit itself looks fine, but the website does not give me confidence that you will get a quality product and/or support. The product description is a bare minimum, well not even that - the printing area is not listed?? The link to the support forum is broken as well.
The Fabx machines look good as far as I can see, as does the rest of the website. Personally I would feel much more comfortable purchasing from '3Ding', given the choices you have presented.
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Thanks for the feedback, I just downloaded the sample of your book - it looks great. Like many sketchuppers I need to be doing as I learn so will buy it once I actually have a machine to implement my learnings on.
A couple more options within India:
Do you think this is a legitimate Printrbot?: http://tannaeducation.com/products/printrbot-printrbot-simple-kit-2014-model/p/101/#
I can get this Ultimaker brought from NZ - I know it was once a great machine but is it still up to standard nowadays?: http://www.trademe.co.nz/Browse/Listing.aspx?id=916316839
There are also these rep-raps I can get brought from NZ:
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can't recommend any machine but I did read somewhere last week about one machine that's apparently having a lot of unhappy users: Makerbot.
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Ash, I am skeptical of the Printrbot you linked to. Maybe you could check with Printrbot directly and see if they are legit, or if there are any 'official' dealers in India.
I would not recommend the used wood Ultimaker. None of the new printers are made of wood any more because if it's tendency to move with the changing seasons. You want a stable frame or calibration and print quality will suffer.
The build quality of your last two links looks fine, but I can't comment any further than that. I haven't had much interaction with Prusa brands. Hope that helps!
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Thats very helpful - your ability to cut through the fog is much appreciated
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Cheers, please let up know what you end up getting.
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Was playing with a couple of flashforges at a hackerspace yesterday - that was pretty cool.
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