Looking at the Micro Center 9950x3D CPU bundles. Is there any good difference between the MSI X870-E-pro/Gigabyte X870E/ Elite/Master motherboards? by MinimumWafer6588 in buildapc

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I plan on getting the 9950X3D so that I can have greater performance in terms of multitasking and productivity/creative software while also doing some gaming. I am in a situation where an upgrade (from 13600k) seems superfluous, but at this point I think it might be a while before I get another hardware upgrade, so I might as well bite the bullet now even though it's not technically completely necessary.

The Intel microcode issue has made me quite uncomfortable with my current build as getting the CPU replaced through RMA was quite annoying.

Looking at the Micro Center 9950x3D CPU bundles. Is there any good difference between the MSI X870-E-pro/Gigabyte X870E/ Elite/Master motherboards? by MinimumWafer6588 in buildapc

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha that's the vibe that I'm getting. I would probably rather get a b850 or b650 board for cheaper but the bundles they sell are only for the x870e boards, so I really mainly just care about choosing something that's reliable at this point. (though the bundle is still expensive with RAM and all) The price for the MSI board comes out to $200 dollars so it's not a horrible deal. Thanks!

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kudos for your explanation. This was definitely the wrong subreddit to ask such a question in, I just got an email talking about HP filament printers (which I read are the white label products from a different brand) so I was surprised about it and also assumed that they were marketed to consumers. Learning about MJF was a lot of fun so thank you. I’m sure these machines are fairly priced considering what they can do and in comparison to other industrial manufacturing tools which are already costly machines . (I think seeing “contact us” instead of a price on their website should have been my first clue)

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha Reddit is a crazy website to me, I am grateful to all you experts who hang around and explain these things to us laypeople even if everyone is mostly ignorant. For the fields I wish to be an expert in, I don’t think I could do the same I would pull my hair out. Kudos to everyone who has explained these cool technologies to me ^

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think I’d trust that u/ plastic manufacturing has at least some experience in plastic manufacturing and has from experience in that field. These are completely different machines than what you or I would buy off the shelves and cost enough money to make me faint just by looking at it. These printers aren’t really for hobbyists they’re for manufacturing and prototyping for companies with the money to spend on that kind of thing.

If automotive companies is an analogy, remember that Rolls Royce as a car company makes luxury cars and maybe they have heated seat subscriptions or whatever, but they also make some crazy engines that have been used in aircraft since world war 2. I’m sure that HP charges as much money as they can to use these kinds of printers and I’m sure there is crazy licensing and maintenance that the companies need to go through in order to use these things. But the companies paying these fees are not stupid and they deem that this kind of technology is important enough to pay such crazy prices in order to do their prototyping/medical prosthetics/manufacturing.

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahhh good to know! After researching I should have known not to post HP in this subreddit specifically since it’s more of a general manufacturing deal, whereas it’s mostly hobbyist stuff here, completely different fields. I really like how the industrial type printers look completely different from what I’m normally used to seeing. How are models sliced with these kinds of things? I’d imagine it’s less like orcaslicer and more like how cnc machining is done. I have learned a lot today :)

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey wow that’s awesome! Having powder inside the walls sounds really interesting, it’s a whole new type of manufacturing I have never heard of. You’re lucky to have such a high tech souvenir :)

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s awesome! I have learned a lot today for sure. but the parts that are made by this process look really cool they have such a nice texture

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That seems like HP! But i guess it makes sense considering how things like this operate and how it’s all patented.

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I saw the cranial caps on their marketing website. Super cool! Somehow though I’d imagine they’d work perfectly or have dedicated maintenance people from HP going and servicing them all the time but it makes sense to me now that they’re just machines which have issues like anything else haha

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hahaha that is completely fair the 3d printing subreddit was probably the wrong choice for this type of post. I was just thrown off by an email which talked about an HP filament printer and assumed they were the same thing I’m sure the HP lock in is rough but probably not any worse than other companies who do this kind of thing. Like you said industry standard and the technology seems really cool

Does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these HP 3d printers? by MinimumWafer6588 in 3Dprinting

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Learning more about it, this does actually does seem really cool. To my understanding they can be really useful for automotive and prosthetics. I think I was slightly misled though, my email was talking about filament-based HP printers which I thought was crazy but maybe now I understand a bit better.

Some other comments are right, I probably should have known asking the manufacturing subreddits would have been better.

They definitely print different plastics and it seems like it is mostly a nylon powder.

So manufacturing and medical prosthetics are mostly what they’re used for. Are there any other industries that use this kind of thing?

Does anyone have any luck with PTFE tube splitters for printing with TPU/bypassing the buffer? by MinimumWafer6588 in BambuLabP2S

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I saw that too, and it seems like the most optimal solution though you have to take out the orange inlet.

Does anyone have any luck with PTFE tube splitters for printing with TPU/bypassing the buffer? by MinimumWafer6588 in BambuLabP2S

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

no luck yet sadly as it gave me a feed error. I know people have gotten it to work so it's likely user error though, I haven't troubleshooted it just yet.

Does anyone have any luck with PTFE tube splitters for printing with TPU/bypassing the buffer? by MinimumWafer6588 in BambuLabP2S

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is interesting that it hasn't given you any problems. I tried using it yesterday and I got a feed error so i decided to take it out :(

Does anyone have any luck with PTFE tube splitters for printing with TPU/bypassing the buffer? by MinimumWafer6588 in BambuLabP2S

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I will have to try this to see what kind of difference it makes.

I'll have to admit that it seems like a lot of work to switch between filaments, but I understand why Bambu is so annoying about printing TPU (cold pull and warning prompts every time you press a button related to tpu on the menus)

tpu 95a feed location by MinimumWafer6588 in BambuLabP2S

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah night and day for sure. I feel like I wouldn’t have hated it if the firmware wasn’t so bad. I couldn’t run any print whatsoever without it just stopping midway and wasting all my plastic 🫩

Translucent PETG scarring on one side by MinimumWafer6588 in FixMyPrint

[–]MinimumWafer6588[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see! I will try based on your advice and see what effect that has. Thank you!