I finally got multi-color working on my Creality K1 Max using the 3D Chameleon.

Decided to make a 2 color benchy and scaled it down to 75% to save time, along with 0.25mm layer height.

So far the Chameleon has been pretty picky with filament, but when it works it works well! This print is with silk gold and matte black. I have even gotten 95A TPU to print with it surprisingly!

I modified the color-change code so it takes 1 minute less, which makes a big difference when you have hundreds of color changes.

Next up, 4 color benchy. Probably will be 10 hrs lol

  • @[email protected]
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    1411 months ago

    Four hours? That seems awfully slow. You say you’re printing this for your store? I would think you’d want to get a Bambu A1.

      • @4lanOP
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        411 months ago

        1min30sec for every color change. Multiply that by hundreds of color changes and it adds up!

        I am starting to see why people usually print whole plates full of multicolor prints. It’s the same amount of color changes, but more way more efficient.

    • @4lanOP
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      411 months ago

      no, this was a print for myself to test the Chameleon. I don’t sell any multicolor prints as of now.

      I prefer non-proprietary parts and unlocked software you get with a rooted K1. I can edit my klipper configs directly.

      This is not my multicolor-specific machine. It will be used mostly for single color regular prints

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        Ah I see! Did you see Bambu has an open source-ish option now with the community firmware?

        • @4lanOP
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          211 months ago

          Yeah that is pretty cool how Bambu is dealing with it too, but not the same as having full root access to the Linux computer that runs the printer.

          I can SSH into my K1 and change things, install programs, etc. I even changed my Start_Print sequence to stop doing all the time-consuming calibration for every print. Sometimes I am just prototyping and dont want 10 min of calibration for a 3 minute print.

    • /home/pineapplelover
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      311 months ago

      Or just well tune your printer. Bambus are fine for people who can spend more money and use proprietary software but will spend less time tinkering.

      • @[email protected]
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        311 months ago

        They have community firmware now and the A1 is $550 bucks with AMS that has no printer poop for multi material. Not that it matters to me, I just grabbed a Qidi X Max 3 for the print volume (and because it was open-ish Klipper).

        • @4lanOP
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          111 months ago

          A1 is recalled isn’t it?

          I also need the large size, otherwise might have gotten a P1S

            • @SpacetimeMachine
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              110 months ago

              A1 technically is as well. But if you have one that isn’t affected it’s not a huge deal.

              • @[email protected]
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                110 months ago

                Oh good to know. I do think as a toy printer for your kids, the A1 mini looks great. And assuming you have kids, then you don’t have time, making the premium price more attractive.

                • @SpacetimeMachine
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                  110 months ago

                  Lol I know people love to hate on Bambu, but mine came out of the box working pretty much perfectly and has been an absolutely incredible printer. Quality far better than anything else I have seen without a lot of extra work on a printer.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    110 months ago

                    I was definitely suspicious, but now that they’re partnering to create community firmwares, it feels like all that suspicion is unwarranted. I think people just couldn’t believe a printer could work so well (and of course there’s the xenophobia).