![]() ![]() While most things work fine in sport or ludicrous mode, not all materials can melt fast enough to keep up with these speeds. You can access the speed settings from the slicer or the printer interface. Once a print is sent, you have the option of bumping it up from standard to “sport” or “ludicrous” speed, which is 124% and 164% faster than normal. Instead of fiddling with complex settings to go high speed, you only have to hit the “turbo” button. However, that’s twice the default speed of the printer. The LiDar sensor, camera and touchpad were not made to work with the cheaper printer’s boards.īambu Lab says its printers can obtain a top speed of 500mm/s and 20,000 mm/s acceleration. You can upgrade a P1P to a P1S but you can not upgrade a P1S to an X1-Carbon. The web store appears to cover every part, from thermistors to belts, so at least customers are not left wondering if 3rd party parts will fit. Fortunately, these are reasonably priced at $9.99 for a stainless steel hotend and $34.99 for the complete assembly.Īll the printer’s parts are custom and need to be purchased directly from Bambu Lab. If you want the option of switching between nozzle sizes, it’s advisable to purchase complete hotend assemblies. This system is not as easy as a quick change E3D Revo, and involves several screws, plugs and very delicate thermistor wires. The nozzle itself is not replaceable – you need to swap out the entire hotend if it gets worn down. ![]() The P1S comes equipped with an all-metal hotend and long-lasting. TheLightSpd’s Purge Slide (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) I printed a slide style chute that brings filament waste to the side of the machine. Even if you don’t use multicolor, the machine will purge filament into a waste chute before every print. The P1S needs a collection bucket for its community-dubbed “poop chute” which is also in the back. It supplements the rather annoying rear mounted spool rack, which I quickly replaced with a table-top spool holder to sit in a more accessible spot next to the printer. The optional AMS is $349 dollars and perches on the printer’s glass top. ![]() The P1S is compatible with Bambu Lab’s now-famous, four-color Automatic Material System. After a few minutes of auto calibration the printer just works. There is no way or even need to adjust the z height. The printer’s highly sensitive auto bed leveling system makes for a perfect first layer. When combined with vibration damping input shaping, the results are exceptionally smooth, high quality prints. The print head stays at the top of the machine while the build plate slowly lowers. Core XY printers use a combination of belts to move the X and Y axis in tandem for smoother, faster printing. It’s the 3rd Core XY printer brought to us by Bambu Lab – all three share the same motion system, build volume, speed and quality. It is fully enclosed with plastic sides – rather than aluminum – and shares the same D-pad selector interface as the P1P. The P1S is the budget model of Bambu Lab’s deluxe X1-Carbon 3D printer. ![]()
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