Overture is the rebranded Amazon Basics filament.
Any proof of that or is it an internet rumor? I want nothing to do with anything that may give Amazon money.
Overture is the rebranded Amazon Basics filament.
Any proof of that or is it an internet rumor? I want nothing to do with anything that may give Amazon money.
There will probably never be any confirmation but one day all the Amazon filament went out of stock then the Overture brand popped up on top of the Amazon search results with identical colors, packaging, and the same measurement markings on the spool.
I think it was more likely that whoever makes the Overture filament was also making the Amazon filament.
The Prusa is a great shortcut on all the time tuning and adding additional features to a CR10 that will inevitably be made. I spent months tuning, tweaking, upgrading firmware, and adding features on the CR10 to make my printing life better all to have the Prusa do everything as good or better out of the box. Both can produce great results, one just takes a lot less time to get there.
My Prusa i3 MK3S was my 4th printer, and has been phenomenal. It just works. I tell it to print something and it does it. I bought the kit version to save $150, but other than that it has required almost 0 effort.
I ran out of filament mid-print, but this is one of my more recent creations...
Prusa 100% because of the tuning (as mentioned) but also because of the great service/support they offer.
I'm responsible for the 3D printers at the university where I work, we currently run 19 Prusa (mix of MK2, MK3 & MK3S) machines and every one of them has worked perfectly right from day 1 and needed very little maintenance/tuning after the build.
You didn't say in your post. Did you get the Prusa kit or assembled version?
Any proof of that or is it an internet rumor? I want nothing to do with anything that may give Amazon money.
I got the kit because of the whole significantly cheaper thing.
It is actually really easy to calibrate because the setup wizard does much of it automatically and it explains pretty much anything you have to do manually on the screen and when to do it.
Don't know, what I do know is that the stuff that was once there worked well, and that rumor or fact led me to try the other stuff with the same results for the same price, was good enough for me.
Wooo new toy! Grats!Ah I couldn't hold out any longer...I caved and ordered an i3 MK3S kit tonight. The Mini is backordered until April and the i3 kit is only 2-3 weeks out so that made the decision for me. I'm excited! :mrgreen:
Ah I couldn't hold out any longer...I caved and ordered an i3 MK3S kit tonight. The Mini is backordered until April and the i3 kit is only 2-3 weeks out so that made the decision for me. I'm excited! :mrgreen:
Nah, calibration is super easy.This question is to all of you with the Prusa i3. Did you buy the kit or assembled? If you bought the kit, was it tedious to calibrate?
I'm fine with the building part, but difficult or tedious calibration would drive me nuts.
You didn't say in your post. Did you get the Prusa kit or assembled version?
Now the kit is $250 cheaper! That's a big chunk of money.
Was your toolboox printed in two colors with the casters or did you glue those on later? I'm a huge fan of the idea of having the ability to print multicolor prints.
Good to know they need very little to keep them running in a place where I assume they see a lot of work.
Wooo new toy! Grats!
Yay! I think it was a wise choice.
Nice Jato. I think you'll like it.
Nah, calibration is super easy.
Toolbox/casters were printed separately. Multi-color requires the MMU upgrade, and I haven't made that plunge yet. I just designed recesses for the caster to sit in.
And congrats on the order. They are a bit spendy, but for me the convenience of just being able to load the Gcode and go has been worth it...
Thanks all! I'm sure I'll love it. It'll be tough to wait the month to receive it! LOL
Have any of you tried Prusa filament?
The MMU looks awesome. I didn't know if you just stopped the print and switched filament. I tried that in my Monoprice Select Mini and it never worked well. Apparently it works much better on the Prusa.
Ridiculously easy to calibrate. I've set up 7 kit builds (assembled 2 myself, had the others assembled by co-workers) since April and the only one that gave me any grief was the one assembled by a guy who thought he was too smart to follow the (very clear and easy to follow) instructions.This question is to all of you with the Prusa i3. Did you buy the kit or assembled? If you bought the kit, was it tedious to calibrate?
I'm fine with the building part, but difficult or tedious calibration would drive me nuts.
You didn't say in your post. Did you get the Prusa kit or assembled version?
Now the kit is $250 cheaper! That's a big chunk of money.
Was your toolboox printed in two colors with the casters or did you glue those on later? I'm a huge fan of the idea of having the ability to print multicolor prints.
Good to know they need very little to keep them running in a place where I assume they see a lot of work.
Thanks all! I'm sure I'll love it. It'll be tough to wait the month to receive it! LOL
Have any of you tried Prusa filament?
The MMU looks awesome. I didn't know if you just stopped the print and switched filament. I tried that in my Monoprice Select Mini and it never worked well. Apparently it works much better on the Prusa.
Ah I couldn't hold out any longer...I caved and ordered an i3 MK3S kit tonight. The Mini is backordered until April and the i3 kit is only 2-3 weeks out so that made the decision for me. I'm excited! :mrgreen: