Hi! New to the community, new to 3d printing, new to all of this.

I am heavily considering the Prusa Mini as my first printer.

  • Want a brand that is a good citizen in the 3d printing community and Prusa seems to be on this list.
  • Want a high quality printer to begin my adventure with that doesn’t leave me guessing if it’s my lack of skill or a lack of quality hardware.
  • Want open design to enable to tweak and improve the hardware/software as I see fit.
  • Linux user who wants full Linux support in the software stack.
  • I want to spend as little as possible on my first printer (still want high quality) because I see myself spending a lot more fairly quickly if I enjoy this as much as I suspect I will. Fortunately I can spend what I need to meet my current requirements but keeping cost down as much as possible is the goal.
  • Enjoy tinkering with hardware and software. Have a background in electronics and Linux system administration.

Would you agree that the Prusa Mini is a good starting spot considering the above?

The pricing I see in reviews etc seems to be lower then what is currently being offered on the Prusa site. Do they often have sales or specials or is this just because the cost of production has gone up? I see reviews that indicate a price of $349 but it’s going for $429 on the Prusa site currently.

Should I consider adding the filament sensor and any extra build sheets? Filament from them or elsewhere?

Anything I am missing or not considering?

Any and all feedback is welcomed! Thanks ahead of time!

  • mrnorrisman@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Not sure about the sale price, but the Mini seems like a perfect fit considering your wants/needs. There are some cheaper options that still allow for tinkering but they may not have the same reliability as the Prusa. So unless budget is a huge concern and you really really like tinkering, I’d stick with the Prusa.

    Personally, I would add the filament sensor and build sheets. My philosophy is that it’s better to have them and not need them, than need them and not have them. Especially when shipping takes a while.

  • LanyrdSkynrd@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I think I’d recommend either buying a larger prusa printer, or a cheaper starter printer. The mini has a small bed that you will probably want to upgrade at some point.

    You can regularly find an Ender 3 for ~$100. It is one of the most used printers out there. Tons of information available online about them. You won’t feel bad about wasting a bunch of money on a printer that sits unused.

    I bought the Prusa Mk3s+ as my first printer, but I wish I had gone with something cheaper. I didn’t know what I wanted because I hadn’t had a 3d printer yet. Now I really want to build a Voron, but I can’t justify retiring a perfectly good $800 printer to build a new one that’s faster.

  • jtskywalker@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I have a very similar list of requirements and was looking at the mini but after adding up the textured build plate, filament sensor, taxes and shipping it was like 560 for the kit - the shipping cost to the US was a big chunk of that, not sure where you are located.

    I ended up ordering a sovol sv06 with 1kg of filament for like $250 on Amazon (there was a coupon for $50 off plus a free roll of filament).

    My thought process was if I like printing I will want to upgrade to something bigger and better and that’s easier to do with a cheaper starting cost. Also the sv06 has some common known issues but it seems popular enough that there are plenty of guides to address them.

    It hasn’t arrived yet so I may regret it but we’ll see I guess

  • terawatt@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I have a Prusa Mini original launch edition, and can’t say enough good things about the printer - we run a low volume Etsy shop with the Mini and it’s been a reliable work horse.

    One thing I learned that is not on your list is that Prusa has great customer support; live people that you can talk to on your questions or issues. This in my opinion separates Prusa from most other consumer printer companies.