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29 / 33
Dec 2015

I own a Kickstarter version of this printer, and I say it is NOT a good beginner printer. The device itself is small and convenient, but the software is terrible and getting good prints from it is very difficult. There is a reason it is so cheap.

Nicely put – I couldn’t agree more. Mine served me very well – it bootstrapped me into the world of 3D printing and I still have a lot of affection for it. It’s a neat little beast, especially for the money, and a great introduction to 3D printing.

Ok. I’ll chime in and try without using the word “good” or “bad”. I’m a backer and got it March this year with zero knowledge of 3d printing. I have since moved on to prusa i3 which I built from kit. Now my M3D is collecting dust displayed prominently in my shelf where I put all my tools and spare part to maintain the i3. My M3D can still print. Slow but it gets the job done quietly with questionable accuracy. I’m mostly confused with this little machine when it comes to improvement / maintenance, I don’t know if the problem I’m facing is software or hardware… And so it has become an unenjoyable experience for me to try to get the machine to produce print that is correct in dimension ands free of artifact. I can’t say M3D is open source. Well if they are, it certainly doesn’t feel like it I think I have enjoyed building the i3 better than tinkering with M3D. I didn’t regret buying the M3D, I just simply need to move on to another machine that is more reliable Stephen

Any of you guys heard about the hello beprusa from beeverycreative? Is it any good for beginners? It has a good price and seems to be full of features.