Cheers, =)
Basically, it's very good for making things for holding awkward pieces in place while you machine them, or for holding a tool in place while you make something. Or like, all the little cable clips and bits of plastic you use to hold other components in place.
Resin… fucking -1/10 because the entire experience is terrible if you aren’t going to use it often … I’m trying to sell all my resin stuff and try replacing it with a different printer I won’t hate if I use it only once a month.
Full disclosure I own 4 printers, a laser scanner and at any one time only one of which is always working and it’s the god damn miserable resin printer because I don’t use it enough to break it.
One of my close friends, however, uses them to make a living selling cosplay props/armor, and I've even put some of my own money into investing in a pair of giant resin printers. He's knowledgeable enough that the results are a solid 8 or 10 out of 10, but holy shit the amount of fiddling he has to do to squeeze out every last ounce of speed from what's inevitably a slow process without producing misprints is insane.
Overall experience is... can be finicky depending on what you're printing, the plastic type (PLA is generally the easiest; PETG will come out stringly; ABS has certain advantages, but can be more finicky), and the printer. I think the overall experience comes down to both use case and equipment.
Online articles and discussions are biased towards people who treat it as a hobby - with this in mind, the finickyness is viewed as a perk; it allows you to build skills working around the various problems, troubleshoot problems with a community, upgrade your printers for fun etc.
Overall, it would be nice to
If I were doing it for a living... Well, getting the printer dialed in to reliably produce prints is a bit of a black art - but maybe the higher end ones are better for that?
Come to think of it, a lot of 3D printer owners seem to spend all their time printing new parts for the printer, which is endearingly circular...
Maybe it's time for me to try OpenSCAD.
I also have a cheap $200 cnc engraver that I've done even less with, for similar reasons.
Also, my current CAD software is blender, so if anyone has something similar (or a plugin) that is better suited to making moving mechanical parts, leave a comment.
Its not like star trek you can't just ask for a toy car and you get it. There is a lot of setup leveling and tweaking of supports and the first layer of print to get the print looking clean or even printing at all.
Printing takes hours like 6+ for anything remotely complicated. It will probably take you two or three goes printing a thing until you get results you are happy with. Once its printed you then need to clean up the print removing support etc.
What material you print in will also massively change your results / chances of success. You may need to encase the printer to control the environment temperature, wind and toxic fumes depending on the material need to be accounted for.
The stuff on thingyverse all looks cool but it's all cool gimmicks if you want to do something useful you need to know how to 3d model.
TLDR: It's all a bit of a faff but if you are the type of person that likes to build their own computer its a lot of fun, being able to download a car felt awesome. The toy car has surprising detail and despite being made in PLA the easiest plastic to use its again surprisingly strong.
Ease of use 4/10. If you can't 3d model its fairly useless 1/10. If you can 3d model its so much faster and easier to get complicated parts 8/10.
If somebody could integrate Openscad into Blender better it would be just swell. Now the Openscad export produces just huge raw blob of faces, the defining structure is lost.
it's been frustrating to troubleshoot when I can't it to print without screwing up (using a model that other people have been printing with no problems).
It just fun and useful to print stuff. Once you know a few basic tools and can think about what prints best.
5 - when if get blocked or 1st print layer is not good.
Starter is quite cheap.
very slow, nozzles get plugged now and then too