by RetireeJay » 2018-Apr-Mon-16-Apr
I recently finished building a Prusa Mk3 from kit. The experience was better than I expected. The metal parts are very solid and robust. The printed parts - and there are many - have amazing quality. There were only a very few places where I had to adapt or modify to get the assembly to work.
The build instructions are absolutely stellar! They provided very clear step-by-step procedures with pictures. Sometimes the pictures in the printed book (yes, there was a printed book!) were a little hard to interpret due to poor contrast of black-on-black, but the parallel online book cleared up all those questions.
The machine worked perfectly on the first try (it helps that I had experience with things like belt tension). You can print either from the SD card (a full size card) or via USB from your computer (the USB connector is the original, robust squarish design, not a small fragile micro-connector).
Repetier does work with it, although I found that I had to set the baud rate to 115200. Probably Cura works also. Prusa has a download package with several programs. One is a simplified wrapper for Slic3r Prusa Edition, but it looks like it is oriented to creating Gcode files for the SD card, not controlling the machine. The package also includes Pronterface - but this UI screen doesn't show you the actual X, Y, Z coordinates or the actual temperatures. They did make a change to the coding of the reported bed temperature from the printer, so Repetier doesn't display or graph the bed temperature even though it can control it.
From the 30,000 foot view, the MK3 is a more solid and well-engineered printer than the old plywood Printrbot Plus. On the other hand, it will be much more difficult to modify with homebrew changes; "it is what it is". It's faster, much quieter, and more precise.
The extruder assembly is a marvel of compactness: direct-drive gear, an extruder body fan, a print-cooling fan, a bed probe, and a filament sensor, all in an assembly smaller than the Printrbot extruder. Both fans are 3-wire with speed sensing; the bed probe is a miniature version with included temperature sensor for compensation, and the filament sensor has four wires - so the grand total wire count going from the extruder body to the Einsy board is pretty high indeed!
I'm looking forward to eventually installing the Prusa multi-material upgrade, especially so that I can do prints with dissolvable supports.
In a few days, the Prusa is going to move onto the favored position right next to my computer and the old Plus is going... where??? I have no idea yet.
Printrbot Plus operational January 2013
Brass threaded rods (5/16" X 18) & nuts for Z axis
GT2 belts & pulleys
Cable chain to reduce probability of fatigue failure in wires
E3D V5 Hot End, 0.4mm nozzle, also 0.8 and 0.25 in use occasionally
PB fan mount + 40mm fan -- using printed mount adapter, not the E3D supplied fan
Injection molded extruder gears
Optical Z "endstop" (custom designed and built)
Have used many pounds of T-Glase filament. Now also doing some work with Ninjaflex SemiFlex
Print on glass with Scotch Craft Stick or other glue stick
"My next printer is..." Prusa i3 MK3, upgraded to MK3S