I guess the point I was trying to make was that what you expect from your printer depends alot on what you are printing, not just what you are printing with.
If your printer cannot reliably print a simple 2 perimeter 20% infill cube over and over again, then your printer needs work. A calibrated SD3 can print cubes all day long without any noticeable variance.
If you get clog problems, or inconsistent infills, then you are looking at filament/material problems.
If simple prints are easy, but more intricate prints are problematic, then the print file itself is the problem. There are tons of stls that were designed with a bunch of support material and PLA. Some print jobs have too much mass to them and all the bed heating and fans will not eliminate curling. But placing a void near the edges will change that dramatically. I have had some really big structural parts that I had made thin already, but would keep curling up on the corners. I remade the part to have internal voids and the curling went away.
The point being, not everything depends on just the printer. It depends on the printer, the filament, the print job, and finally the user. If there is consistency on all four of those, there will be consistent prints .
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