carl_m1968 wrote:There is no such thing as a plug and play 3d printer. If it is advertising as such then that is just bait and sales hype. You are always going to need to do calibrating, adjusting, and repairing. It's the nature of the hobby.
If you really just want to plug it in, load it, and go. This hobby is most likely not for you.
I don't think everyone take 3D printing as hobby, some were just take 3D design as hobby and need to turn their design into reality or so called prototyping. Many of them don't even care that much about the printing quality and choice of color. They don't care it is print out of ABS or PLA or how long it take to print.
I also see significant amount of people enjoy post printing processing their model, they polish and paint their print and really enjoy the process, printing resolution of color of filament is not as important.
Let's face it, people define the nature of 3D printing hobby as calibrating, adjusting, and repairing are actually small percentage. The reality is, most people are not capable of learn and master all those calibrating, adjusting, and repairing.
Plug and play 3D printer do exist, they may not give you best printing quality, and they most likely can not use 3rd party filament, and more importantly, they are not affordable for most of us. But I believe it is the trend of 3D printing business.
(Da Vinci 1.0, Jr. 1.0 RAMPS, miniMaker) X4, (Creality CR-10S, CR-10 mini, Ender-3) X4, Anycubic MEGA X4, Anycubic Chrion X1, ADMILAB Gantry X2 (MonoPrice Maker Select V2, Plus, Ultimate)X4--Select mini X1, Anycubic photon X4, Wanhao duplicate D7 X1.
iNSTONE Inventor Pro X2, CTC Dual X2, ANET-A8, Hictop 3DP-11, Solidoodle Press, FLSUN I3 2017X1