Just print yourself another desk.
Do you really need a 12 minute benchy?
Try these https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3020865 in TPU and add some vibration foam under that if needed. Also lower jerk and accel.
P.S. Still rocking the OE ender. Direct drive micro swiss and klipper means tpu + can print flawless at well north or 100mm/s. All for $300 ish.
These feet do look nifty, thanks!
I only use the pre-sliced benchy that came with the printer to compare filaments. 99 percent of my prints are functional items and almost all of these I model myself in FreeCAD.
My current project took 25 hours on the Ender-3 Pro and takes 6 hours on the new guy. Game changer, makes me try projects/revisions that I wouldn't have attempted before. Not to knock the trusty old Ender 3, it was my go-to for a while when I needed FDM and the build volume was big enough. It still outperforms my other FDM printers, quality wise. Just takes it sweet time to do so. :)
- Direct extruder for soft materials
- 300 °C hotend
- WiFi capable, no need to mess around with SD-cards or USB-Sticks
- A lot more silent than the 3 Pro
Edit: + Magnetic PEI sheet + Auto bed leveling
PSA: The Creality_Print Slicer (v4.3.8.6991-x86_64) has a slow as molasses preview and is prone to crash, at least on my Linux machine. I use Cura, OrcaSlicer and S3D with good results. Still have to put all of them through their paces thoroughly.
Get yourself some TPU and print yourself some squishy ball feet.
I'll keep that in mind, thanks for the tip!
I got to see what was the fastest printer in the world a few years back,silly really, they just kept adding steel to the base until didn’t wander around while at full speed.
Isolation mounts (McMaster Carr) are neat but can make secondary problems as they do isolate but resonances can happen and it can even throw off the printer head from the g forces. I still have a 3 pro, haven’t kept up with new ones.
Might look into these https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5465763
Tighten the bolts on your desk legs. Niggerfaggot.
I have the Ender-3 V3 SE. It's a nice printer. It's my first one. I'm just learning how to use it right now. It is a good starter printer to learn on, its not wifi so I do have to use the SD card to print. But so far I'm really enjoying learning what this thing can do.
The SE would have already been a huge upgrade over my old Ender-3 Pro. Capable little machine. You'll have a lot of fun with it.
I find it quite satisfying to hold an object I modeled in my hand, when it only existed in my head before. There's a learning curve but if you stick with it, the reward is worth it.
Not quite sure how to express this but an adjustment of thought pattern was helpful for me. Had to remind myself that in case i needed some object, would it make sense to print it? Sometimes just the learning experience of it, is what adds another tool to your mental toolbox.
(post is archived)