I run a small 3d print shop for resin minis, I sell about 200-300 minis a month. I was very interested in this printer at first. Anything that streamlined my process and eliminated print failures (which aren't super common but really set back the production queue when you have them) would be great. My attitude started to sour when you said "proprietary resin" and this printer was 100% completely ruled out when you revealed the cost of the resin. Unless customers make a specific request and pay a custom order upcharge, I'm printing all orders in Sunlu standard, which I get for $15 USD per 1000g, Heygears is 4-6x as expensive. I'd have to raise my prices, and I don't know that the market would bear it. No deal.
@robertmartinu88037 ай бұрын
And even if I'm willing to pay the premium for resin I do that for specific properties. Also easy availability might be a factor.
@MorganScott827 ай бұрын
@@3dPrintingMillennial did you watch the video? It's not just the form factor, I could free pour any resin directly into the vat like I do with my elegoo printers. It's that it uses some kind of RFID or QR code in the resin bottle to set exposure settings and they cant be changed by the end user.
@robertmartinu88037 ай бұрын
@@3dPrintingMillennial Doesn't help you with the locked down curing parameters.
@3dPrintingMillennial7 ай бұрын
I deleted my comment. It's a long video. Now I see that the resin cures at a different wavelength. Overall, this seems like a badass printer. If I had a mini figure business, I'd certainly buy this.
@44Mikeramirez7 ай бұрын
I like a lot of the features, but the build plate with the holes F cleaning those they can be a pain, also the price is insane for how fast this technology is advancing it will be out of date very soon. Plus the cost of their resin I am not sure who this printer is for.
@DarkDragonWing7 ай бұрын
You can use just about any aftermarket resin with the Reflex. The Reflex prints based on the setting you choose in the slicer, not what's on the bottle. The RFID on the bottle is only there to tell you whether or not you put in the right bottle or not. There is always an option to ignore that message and just print it anyway. You can take off the RFID from the bottle and the Refilex will still print. There are many print settings for different resins that you can choose from in the slicer. Try PAU10 setting or PAP10 setting, I found them to work on ABS-Like, High-Temp, and Flexible resins. I've been using the Reflex since July 2023 day in and day with no problem to date. Also, I'm not telling anyone to use aftermarket resins. 😁
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
But… I know the settings do not come from the rfid The settings come from those I showed you can select in the video. None of those settings may be right for a particular resin you choose and. Certainly not optimal. So yes it can work, but it’s not optimal, and since the biggest selling point of this printer vs others is the value of instant perfection. Then what is the point in getting this printer…???
@DarkDragonWing7 ай бұрын
@FauxHammer I agree, it is very understandable that one may want perfection. However, perfection is in the eyes of the beholder in this case. For me, I have yet wished to change any setting because the prints come out perfect. However, I'm all for HeyGears to enable the tweaking of the print setting, I don't see why not.
@Teddyboy-EM7 ай бұрын
Easiest thing for them to do is lower the cost of their resins. I wouldn’t be surprised if they have a healthy margin on them. I think they have room to do that.
@optimaximal6 ай бұрын
@@Teddyboy-EM "I wouldn’t be surprised if they have a healthy margin on them. I think they have room to do that." But why would they? Profit is profit. They're likely already aware that the price point makes their product a boutique printer, so the resin for the captive audience of buyers is where they're making their money.
@jishani15 ай бұрын
@@optimaximal "Why would they do that?" Well, do you wanna make $50 on one bottle of resin and sell 5 of them or do you want to make $4 on a bottle of resin and sell 2 million of them?
@WARPAINTandUnicorns7 ай бұрын
The ability to choose of WHAT you can print is the future of resin printers... we are getting flexible resin in the market that will open up what people will want in a resin printing and wanting to get a resin printer for. Rigth now this printer feels like a Cricut Maker where you can not do custom profiles for the Knife Blade (most important tool for the Maker line and the reason for getting a Maker) and you have to cheat the Knife Blade pre setting and babysit the cuts to make sure it cutting non tested materials. Bambu got it right in that it more like Silhouette's Camo 4. ALL the tools you can create customer profiles for your bespoke materials. But the thought put into te machine it's self is SUCH a game changer that it will change what other brands will aim towards their printer functions.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
yep, and that is the "BUT" in this whole setup. This is amazing, for the people it is amazing for, but that is a limited audience
@MickTee2k7 ай бұрын
Epsom: "Here's a printer that has lots of features, sorry it's a bit expensive" Brother: "Here's a cheap printer but you're stuck with using our expensive inks" Hey Gears: "Yes our printer is expensive, but you're stuck with using our resin" They seem to want their cake and eat it too.
@1stRanger7 ай бұрын
It wouldn't be such a problem is only their resins were competitively priced. Maybe just a bit more expensive even would still be fine.
@MickTee2k7 ай бұрын
@@1stRanger And you then have the problem of being locked into an ecosystem that's reliant on the manufacturer not only staying around, but continuing to provide the consumables. The system is really designed for a commercial setting to allow a small business to train a monkey to press a button to make what is needed. Unsure its usefulness/ in a hobby situation.
@Veefan33 ай бұрын
Frrr
@TheMugwump17 ай бұрын
The amazing BS of voiding your warranty from "damage caused from using 3rd party resins" is a complete load of crap and an absolute no sale for me. I don't care how well it works. EDIT: Oops. I forgot to like the video at least. Here ya go ;) I AM excited to see companies copy/expand on some of these ideas. The slicer seems pretty damn cool and the air assist does sound like a game-changer. Great review.
@leobro63987 ай бұрын
Exactly. As soon as I heard that apple came to mind witz their hate for 3rd party products and overpriced machines
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
fair
@TheMugwump17 ай бұрын
@@leobro6398 Remember the first Macintosh commercial?(I'm that old :p ) THAT'S what I remember when I see Apple these days. They're the polar opposite of how they saw themselves back then. I own a Voron 3d printer so you know exactly how I feel about proprietary designs. Heh.
@iFilipis7 ай бұрын
And it's cloud connected. And seems like it won't even let you print if you choose not to log in. That's a real deal breaker
@0x7777 ай бұрын
@@leobro6398 I felt more reminded of what HP does with their printer, with the ink-lock-in and now the abo model where you can't even print without their printer being allowed to phone home to the mothership. Sorry, but we should not allow this parasitic behaviour ruin another industry.
@rodneytrotter26437 ай бұрын
Too expensive and a closed software and resin usage is a deal breaker for. It's a step backwards.
@3dpathfinder7 ай бұрын
@HeyGears Please make this more affordable for the masses instead of the elite. It doesn't mean you aren't a premium product, but being in every 3d resin printers home would be a statement in and of itself. I agree with Ross on this that , Thousands of units sold is way better then hundreds. Also, with huge sale numbers means the manufacturing itself becomes less and streamlined increasing bottom line profit. The resin for your printers is crazy expensive. This printer isn't for large companies to use for production, they would get industrial machines and write off the cost, so , you cant price the materials the same. I don't want to have to say well , do I really want to print this because it will take this much resin and I cant buy anymore right now because of other living expenses. Make it available to a large consumer base , not just those that have 6 plus figure incomes and large amounts of deposable income.
@Basement_CNC7 ай бұрын
what you dont get is : THOS IS NOT FOR HOBBY-USERS they dont want stuff like that ,the compete with formlabs and similar printers, not creality elegooo or similar. And suddenly everything makes sense, tje price, the materials, the closed system etc. 😮 and they dont want to support the masses of normal users.
@stevrgrs7 ай бұрын
I mean 1399 isn’t that bad for this size / quality. It’s the price of a laptop. I already love my Mega 8k but I’d think about giving this a shot. The resin is definitely $$& though :(
@XionEternum7 ай бұрын
Worth mentioning, but write-offs don't mean "free or partially paid for stuff" like people seem to think. Just means not getting taxed on the income that was used for the purchase. The company still pays for the stuff, they just don't have to pay taxes on the equivalence of their expenses on their gross revenue. It's like not having to pay income tax every paycheck, but getting taxed on all income that wasn't used for essential expenses when you file your taxes.
@harrisonlorens35857 ай бұрын
“The elite” lmfao do you really talk like this in real life. It’s literally just an expensive printer. Relax.
@lilietto16 ай бұрын
I find this request redundant. "Please, make this cheaper so I can buy it" would be a valid demand on something first necessity, not on a resin printer.
@SpottedHares28 күн бұрын
Fun fact it was the other way around for space pencils and space pens. The space pen was a made by a private company and the USA and USSR just bought them for their space programs and the pencil proved to be rather problematic in space.
@HuntersOA7 ай бұрын
As someone who does occasional commision works of resin prints (today arrives my new FDM printer for FDM as well) I am now seriously considering this. What I waste most of my time on, is checking pre-supports. Seeing they are bad. Re supporting all the required models, doing the test print, re printing after support corrections, etc etc etc. Usually I need about 0.5-1h for each print job to verify and ensure they are good. This ensures that a 10+h print job is not failing wasting way more time.... The approach they had and how good the auto supports look there, it would be a game changer for me - saving countless hours in the long run. For bigger businesses, this is a tremendous time saver. It does not matter that the resin is a bit more pricey. For me as well - it is never the material cost that drives up my prices. It is labour. One of my last jobs needed about 1l of resin (not exactly sure but before delivery the models were about 1050g so a bit more than 1l) and I love siraya tech ABS like. That is about 50 bucks of resin. Compared to labour - print preparation, procuring models. Supporting. Post processing. Sanding. The job was about 20h labour + waiting for 6 plates of printing. The material costs almost don't matter compared to labour time.
@Blue-eu5qn7 ай бұрын
I use Siraya Tech with this printer. Works just fine with their settings. Super crisp detail.
@HuntersOA7 ай бұрын
@@Blue-eu5qn it sure does
@adamjosephsnyc7 ай бұрын
This printer sounds amazing. And the feature set is perfect for someone like me. I’ll wait until these features trickle down to the sub $600 printer. In the meantime I will continue playing with my bamboo labs A1.
@WARPAINTandUnicorns7 ай бұрын
I'd be happy with a slightly smaller plate and non-feeding system, the basic pour lip and the slice system is SUCH a game changer that an "A1" or more like "P1S" level printer would be an absolute BEAST in the market.
@gatling2167 ай бұрын
I’m an old school FDM guy. I learned to print by flogging an Ender 3 within an inch of its life, and by the time it finally died, I was printing carbon fiber polycarbonate. That was a years long process and I learned a lot, but as soon as the P1P hit the market, I snapped it up. I got into printing because I wanted to make cool stuff. Everything else was ancillary to that goal. I got out of the tinkering game (mostly, I’ve done a few mods to my P1P) as soon as I could, and I haven’t looked back. Resin printing has always been a pain in the rear, which is why I never took the plunge. I just want it to work. If that was the case here, I wouldn’t mind the price tag. But so long as the ecosystem is so closed that I don’t even have the option to screw around, I’ll keep looking. It just works in 90% of the potential use cases is great, but I need to be able to fine tune to hit the other 10%. If I can’t, why bother?
@Snee_3D7 ай бұрын
This would have been an instant buy from me if they didn't take the proprietary resin approach. I want the full premium product that this is, cost included because I need my prototypes to work first time, but let's say I wanted to sell the physical versions of the prints. No access to print settings and the sheer cost of the resin hurts that return way too much if I used this for a kickstarter.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
I’m so glad everyone is saying this because I’ve been telling them this for months. So nice to see it echoed without me prompting such a response. Thank you, I feel validated
@Teddyboy-EM7 ай бұрын
They’re leveraging their existing technology from the commercial prosthetics market that they compete in. It would be really nice if I can use another vendors resin with this printer by selecting its profile from within Blueprint. Pouring it into the vat and pressing print, or pouring it into a bottle and letting the printer handle the dispensing. The Form 2 would allow the use of third party resins. The $500 and below tier of resin printers is crowded. It’s shows almost no differentiation between the brands. They use the same chitu based hardware, and slicers out of the box. Lychee slicer is probably better than chitubox, but both are hot garbage. They work but not as well as they should. I would like to see third party resin profiles integrated into the ecosystem, but it has to be seamless. The only other printer that’s coming out in this price range is the Athena ($1500).
@thatonedudeguy81087 ай бұрын
its crazy how amazing the proof of concept works for the resin filling system, a collapsible bottle and sluice that auto-regulates how much resin is in the vat is amazing and then it just shot itself in the foot with a shotgun because of how expensive it is like they couldnt make a variant where the bottle is refillable, or you could get an empty bottle to fill it with a third party resin? "damage can be caused by third party resin" bs claim aside, that is
@msp56167 ай бұрын
It appears that the Bambu Labs' success can be attributed to several factors, including the quality of their printers and software, as well as their competitive pricing. However, it is important to consider that a closed ecosystem may deter potential customers, particularly with regard to the availability and cost of materials.
@Bardghost_Isu7 ай бұрын
I think the resin bottles and RFID is my biggest concern. Bambu have managed to do it the acceptable way by using it to identify their own filament and pre-load the settings into the slicer for good prints. But I worry about others getting aboard the same kind of system with less than stellar plans for the future, where they could easily go down the HP ink route but for 3d printing, which I am already feeling uncomfortable about with this printer given that they lock you out of setting exposure settings and lock it to the resins that they sell. It wouldn't shock me if down the line the printer can track unique identifiers on the rfid tags and register a bottle as empty so you can't refill it.
@xRaptorScreamx7 ай бұрын
in User Experience, Bambu is great, but right now Qidi Max 3 vs P1C, and the new Tech Q1 Pro vs P1S, are a bit better when it comes to printing, especially features and materials that they can print
@ScytheNoire7 ай бұрын
Don't forget the huge security concerns with Bambu printers, the data they are sending, access to your entire network, and the need to isolate it from your other devices. Add in that they have poor support and tried to cover up a required recall for the A1 fire hazard flaw.
@lamda9517 ай бұрын
"However, it is important to consider that a closed ecosystem may deter potential customers, particularly with regard to the availability and cost of materials." I think this is definitely the case for some but not all. You can build a computer and a lot of people do, but a lot of people don't want to fuss around with it all. This is probably a sign of the market maturing. I would say with a young market people need to try and be able to change things to get it to work with their conditions. With a maturing market a lot of people coming in don't want to do that and they just want the end result and this approach sells to that ideal. I think there will always be a market that demands the ability to choose their own resins so the printers that do that aren't going anywhere. However I suspect that the market that just works will probably end up being bigger. Most people forget that the time for working things out means most people will go for things that just work as they don't want to have to do that.
@johngelnaw12437 ай бұрын
@@xRaptorScreamx Really? I have yet to find a "consumer" filament that doesn't print well in my X1C--pla, petg, tpu, asa, pla-cf, and that's just my list. And the AMS is definitely still a killer feature.
@ScytheNoire7 ай бұрын
Not being able to modify settings or freedom to use other resin is a deal breaker. Bambu's closed system has A LOT of drawbacks and problems. Apple-fication is not a good thing. Build volume is just way too small for my "needs" also. Still waiting for a 300 cubed build volume for large scale prints.
@wafflecart7 ай бұрын
Dead on arrival: - have to use their resins - have to use their slicer - formlabs clone - 385nm vs 390 is a negligible difference. I don’t think that’s what’s giving the better quality it’s probably the combo of their proprietary resin and settings. - surely layout/orientation should be done before support? - making slicing a “background task” is not a excuse for slow slicing. - yes it’s cheap but when you add up the wash station, cure station and PRM it’s not anymore. - worrying that exposure test cracked, shattering parts of build plate, first print failed.
@Blue-eu5qn7 ай бұрын
This thing is awesome! - Other resins have already been shown to work with it. - Get to use their slicer - Clone? Did you watch the video? - I get the same quality with Siraya Tech resin as theirs. - The supports will always recalculate after you orientate your files. - Who said its slow? Did he say that? I must have missed it but its similar to other slicers. - You dont have to buy their washer and cure station but I got the Christmas deal and saved around 300 - 400 bucks. - Now you are just looking for stuff to complain about. 😅
@hihellothere95697 ай бұрын
That last bit was his fault really. User error
@Veefan33 ай бұрын
@@Blue-eu5qnshush fanboy
@Desmo9047 ай бұрын
The printer, cure station and vacuum pump thingy will push the total to around/over $2700. You could get 3xGK Two's for that and they are expensive! Pity.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
exactly :(
@FlesHBoX7 ай бұрын
Yeah, and the money they are asking for the cure station and air pump are absolutely ridiculously overpriced for what they are. Hey Gears is trying to push the b2b pricing model into consumer-level sales.
@FlesHBoX7 ай бұрын
@@retromodernart4426 wow, you really holding onto that grudge for a while eh?
@FlesHBoX7 ай бұрын
@@retromodernart4426 You must have an incredibly dull life. I had completely forgotten you existed until you posted. The fact that you are still so butt hurt about this makes me worried for your mental health. Seriously, put down the phone, look up at the world and experience it. There's a lot of things that make life worth living.
@germanmosca3 ай бұрын
@@retromodernart4426 I dunno, but i find a Resin printer that doesn't allow me to finetune print settings to be the actuall scam....
@CF_Sapper7 ай бұрын
As someone looking at buying a resin printer, this appeals to me the same way Bamboo labs does, no nonsense printing/slicer, that works when I want to print something to fix a problem BUT unfortunately I have to, for the timing being pass on this because unlike Bamboo not allowing for that tweaking if you want, and are not limited to their own filament/resin is an instant deal breaker. I live in an area where I can't immediately get proprietary consumables, and for wear parts that's no a big deal because keeping a small stock on hand take up little room, I can't keep a bunch of reels and bottles, I mean I could but I don't do enough consistent printing to justify it right now. Being able to quickly have a roll or two of filament shipped to me in a day or two from a few different suppliers is a plus, the possibility of not being able to print something because I have to wait several weeks for a bottle to be delivered because the supply chain isn't there or their resin is out of stock is a no go, and not being able to tweak to adjust for climate or altitude is not ideal. Hopefully they can do something like Bamboo where they allow us to make a resin profile that the printer will recognize. I realize I'm probably not the target audience for this printer but it feels like I am just outside their target.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Yep, I hope HeyGears reads your comment
@RisingApe7 ай бұрын
Absolutely this, I’m testing this printer at the moment and this out performed the Form Labs 3L in my last video.. amazing machine!
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
WOW! that;s great to know, I can;t wait for that video
@TheDainerss6 ай бұрын
3:17 those orange lights actually serve a purpose. They help to counter UV light leaking into the print chamber. These same lights are used in custom printer boxes to reduce UV leakages.
@theVariedLife7 ай бұрын
This printer is indeed amazing. The auto supports is next level. The auto leveling, heated resin, auto vat filing and the rest is awesome. I saw another review of this printer and it was said it prints 30% faster than the Saturn 3 Ultra and GKtwo (at least one of those). As others have said the only thing that makes this a deal killer is the inability to use third party resins. I get HG wants to safeguard their proprietary resin and settings but at least allow people to use third party resin and enter your own settings. IF they did this THEN I would throw away my Saturn 3 Ultra with a smile on my face. Now the elephant in the room = price. Its steep but if you like the true autosupport system, which will only get better over time, is amazing. I figure for this level of printer its warranted but that darn no third party resin kills this for me. Thanks for the great video. Of course you do realize you should probably do a part 2 to go into more details right? hint, hint. ;)
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Aww man, this one was enough work. Put it this way, I’d do another video if I thought they sell enough of these to warrant further support from me. I just don’t trust it will and the comments I’ve seen here echo the sentiment I’ve had about this since day 1
@theVariedLife7 ай бұрын
I understand. Thanks for the reply.@@FauxHammer
@theVariedLife3 ай бұрын
@@FauxHammer You do know you opened Pandora's box right? That means you need to try your Wargamer Resin in the UltraCraft Reflex and see if it prints. You know its crossed your mind... others have shown Sunlu, Jamghe and Elegoo resins work in it so why not try yours and see? Hint, hint... ;)
@TomPaintsMinis7 ай бұрын
It sounds/looks amazing, but a closed ecosystem is an absolute dealer breaker for me. Hopefully like anything the improvements they have made roll down through other manufacturers. I'd love to see heated vats or enclosures become the normal rather than something found only on the high end models.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Agreed on everything you said
@dexlovesgames_dlg7 ай бұрын
Plus the pour spout. Genius
@hazonku7 ай бұрын
They DEFINITELY need to take your suggestion of re0using the spring cap & just selling the resin bottles with disposable caps. The "cheap" bottle costing literally twice as much as most quality resins and the inability to tweak settings or use third party resins are an absolute no go for me. Those things alone are going to absolutely destroy the reach of an otherwise perfect printer that could fundamentally change all of resin printing by raising the bar in so many ways. I'll wait for the competition to do their homework & figure out how to offer all of this while still being fairly affordable, "Looking at you, Elegoo & Anycubic. Get your shit together."
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
We can pray
@diehexenmaus1857 ай бұрын
this is the video that's finally convinced me to get the uniformation gk2.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
I get that
@doomedmini51917 ай бұрын
Same, and what countrys they support limits me. BUT their blueprint software looks amazing. Is there a comparable software out there that is more refined than lychee and chitubox?
@Bertolf1007 ай бұрын
As someone who's been in the market for my first resin printer for a couple of months (and who's first fdm printer was indeed a bamboo), this is now at the top of my candidate list.
@tenchuu0077 ай бұрын
"We got you exactly the puppy you wanted! It's perfect! Except it's incontinent, constantly. Just a constant dribble of pee. We're sure you can over look it."
@omi_liang7 ай бұрын
You're quite right, it indeed depends on the perspective from which you view the situation. For example, if you possess a patch of grass, a perfect little puppy could make this lawn brim with vitality.
@silenttraveler71927 ай бұрын
At 80.00 a bottle would cost me more a month then my Car Payment 😢. Silly Stupid, i will wait 😮😮😮
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Good comparison
@Zunip1827 ай бұрын
No one is questioning if your dragging out the video. Relax
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Nobody sensible is., but I was more just trying to get a joke in there as It was going on a while even for my liking
@markuszirbel38317 ай бұрын
I wouldn't buy a printer where I am limited to 1 specific brand of resin. It is a clear no go.
@oldoneswithdice7 ай бұрын
Exactly
@syranth89127 ай бұрын
I'm a specialist in filament based printing but this is the first liquid based system that made me interested in trying the method.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Brilliant, I knew this would have an audience
@rsilvers1296 ай бұрын
Don't get too excited. The messy resin sticky becomes tiresome.
@kitjamieson9762Ай бұрын
@@rsilvers129 I completely agree. Automate the resin vat cleaning and I would leap at resin printing again.
@jackblack29313 ай бұрын
I absolutely love the performance of this compared to the work I'd otherwise have to put in to perfect the printing, which is why I have 3 Bambu printers. I really got into Bambu printers, mostly because I was presented with really fast and accurate, tinker/hassle free printing experience, which in no doubt deliveres 100% of the time, gives me more time to be productive and creative with all my projects. And Bambu is still checking all the boxes when it comes to FDM 3D printing for the "lesser experienced in tinkering" day to day hobbyist. I'd be more than willing to buy this printer, when HeyGears drops the resin prices to match other brands, because for the last year or so, I've been waiting for a printer like this one to come out which is as user-friendly as this one seems as I have absolutely no experience with resin printing and I don't really have the time to tinker with one. Definitely a potential customer when their resin becomes affordable...
@antoniomromo7 ай бұрын
So the comparison to Bambu ends at consumables. Bambu is a premium printer whos company recognizes the need for inexpensive consumables. Their parts and filament are only slightly more expensive than the average competitors. This has been stated as an intentional fact from bambu. This printer is chasing the same market at form labs, not bambu. A more accurate title would be the best form labs competition...but that gets less clicks
@rsilvers1296 ай бұрын
"Their parts and filament are only slightly more expensive than the average competitors." I would say their parts are lower than competitors.
@NuarStanger7 ай бұрын
I'd be willing to fork out the cash for this amazing printer... but... it is completely out of the question since you are forced to use only their resin at that RIDICULOUS price. Maybe if they do end up releasing refill packs, like you mention, at a reasonable friggin price... maybe... A real friggin shame... damn.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Yep, that's how I feel too
@rudevectors80187 ай бұрын
At 3x the price of other comparative printers. Maybe wait 6 months and see if many of the good features are replicated in cheaper models.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
make that 18 months and you may be onto something. It;s been over a year since we got the GKTwo and only now are other brands adding heaters, and not great ones at that
@abroken-heartedliberal95077 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The Russians actually switched to pens in space because pencils sent graphite dust everywhere
@user-hi1mj4mc3w7 ай бұрын
As someone who just wants the highest quality miniatures to paint this feels like it would be the way to go. I have no interest in it being a hobby unto itself. Avoiding misprints, learning software etc cost time and I'd rather just print and forget about it. Would have been interesting to see how much more £ the resin is compared to others. Would be great to have a follow up to see if parts need replacing, will it out last comparative printers and perhaps save you money in the long term. Cheers
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Yeah and as I said there are buyers out there for this, so the printer certainly has value, I just personally wish it were open as do many other potential users
@markbooth30667 ай бұрын
Another commenter here said the proprietary resin is 4x to 6x the price of the resin they currently use for their minis!
@ashleygibson21417 ай бұрын
I am a 3D printing noob to all intents and purposes. All the things that put me off; learning to support, levelling and dialling in, etc etc etc are solved by this printer and the ecosystem around it. My dentist has their pro system and has shown me it quickly and how it works. It blew my mind. This is a printer for people like me. Happy to pay a premium to print the volume of minis I want without it becoming a full 4th hobby. I can just print then do what I always want to do, which is paint, display and play with them. Not spend 2 weeks troubleshooting and reprinting and getting my clinically diagnosed OCD brain locked by fiddling with tiny settings changes.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Exactly, there certainly are people out there for this machine and it seems like you are one of those people. It's not for everyone but if you are willing to pay for this to do all that for you, then it;s the right one for you.
@nofudastofu7 ай бұрын
At first, everything sounds super interesting, but the extreme price for resin scares me off too much
@DevilizerHimself7 ай бұрын
Hey, I liked the fact this was a 40 minute video. 40 minutes well spent I think. Deal killer was the resin and tweak lock, for sure. There's a reason why I don't buy Apple products, and this machine reflects that. Also, kinda wish there was a "lite version" without the heated vat, resin level detector and resin refill thing for a cheaper price. Aaaand only available in 7 countries, so I couldn't even get one if I wanted to. That being said, I love how well built this machine is, how well built the software is, and how they've focused on print quality. The machine seems excellent for what the task it's set to do.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
thanks, and I appreciate the approval of video length. i was worried this would do terrible, but it;s my best performing video ever - in a day. totaly get your position on the printer too, same for me
@DevilizerHimself7 ай бұрын
@@FauxHammer To be honest I never noticed I had spent 40 minutes watching, since I never felt my time was wasted. So good job 😁
@johnhinkey53367 ай бұрын
Ah, far from a Bambu Labs X1C, P1S, P1P, etc. Lots of lots of issues this has for my uses (engineering parts): - Need to be able to tweak the leveling. No printer I've seen is really well leveled straight from the factory - Perforated build plate - un-usable for direct to plate printing of flat-ish parts that can't have supports or the supports are individual (not on a raft) and smaller than the holes. - Needs a flex plate option - WhamBam where are you? - Heating only the VAT is not optimal - for accurate z-dimensions the resin and build volume temperature must be the same to prevent part shrinkage as the newly-printed part surfaces aren't as hot as the resin. Best setup is heating the LCD from underneath + vat heating + build volume air heating. - Closed resin system - ugh. There are many many superior 3rd party resins out that that one must use - The air compressor system to inflate the area under the vat film is overly engineered/complicated - there must be a better way (I can think of a couple). Plus you want a vacuum between the vat film and the LCD surface during the retract and cure so that there is absolutely no trapped air between them. You want that film sucked down to the LCD surface as soon as the retract phase has started. - Proprietary bottles . . ugh. I'm sure someone will produce 3rd party bottles and valves eventually. - Overly-complicated vat - they need to have a simpler vat design w/o heater and auto fill features as people like me will not use either (I would install a heater inside the machine to make the whole machine be at my desired printing temperature ~35C or so) - Really need to be able to see what's going on inside w/o having to raise the lid. That's just plain silly. Other machines suffer this as well and I've had to install interior LCD (no UV) lighting. - Make the interior lights usable by being brighter - Cure station needs to be able to cure while at elevated temperature to get the best post-cure properties - can it (pre)heat to 80C AND cure at the same time? Wasn't clear (maybe I missed it). - Wash station is totally silly - I don't want my parts crashing into each other while they are in the soft pre-cured state. Currently I keep my parts on the flex plate and put the whole flex plate on an oscillating table inside a glass sealed container and that works really well. Otherwise for loose parts they need to be still and the IPA swirled around them to prevent damage - And probably a few other issues one would uncover during actual use. I had hopes, but alas they are dashed, especially for the asking price. Yes it is kind of like an iPhone, but in all the bad ways.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Oooh, a lot to respond to here, lets go.. - Need to be able to tweak the leveling. No printer I've seen is really well leveled straight from the factory -- this is, and if it isn;t it tells you which screws to turn and what direction and how much of a rotation to turtn it. - Perforated build plate - un-usable for direct to plate printing of flat-ish parts that can't have supports or the supports are individual (not on a raft) and smaller than the holes. -- but when printing from the build plate you get expansion of early layers due to excessive curing of base layers. I don;t understand this arguement in resin TBH, - Needs a flex plate option - WhamBam where are you? -- If this is popular I;m sure they'll make one - Heating only the VAT is not optimal - for accurate z-dimensions the resin and build volume temperature must be the same to prevent part shrinkage as the newly-printed part surfaces aren't as hot as the resin. Best setup is heating the LCD from underneath + vat heating + build volume air heating. --- fair, I honestly didn;t check for chamber heating, i should. - Closed resin system - ugh. There are many many superior 3rd party resins out that that one must use -- agreed - The air compressor system to inflate the area under the vat film is overly engineered/complicated - there must be a better way (I can think of a couple). Plus you want a vacuum between the vat film and the LCD surface during the retract and cure so that there is absolutely no trapped air between them. You want that film sucked down to the LCD surface as soon as the retract phase has started. -- yep, I like it but not optimal, it does allow the vacum during cure, it releases before lift - Proprietary bottles . . ugh. I'm sure someone will produce 3rd party bottles and valves eventually. --yep - Overly-complicated vat - they need to have a simpler vat design w/o heater and auto fill features as people like me will not use either (I would install a heater inside the machine to make the whole machine be at my desired printing temperature ~35C or so) -- 6 of one, half a dosen of the other, it is a lot of expense for marginal benefit - Really need to be able to see what's going on inside w/o having to raise the lid. That's just plain silly. Other machines suffer this as well and I've had to install interior LCD (no UV) lighting. -- again, fair - Make the interior lights usable by being brighter --agreed - Cure station needs to be able to cure while at elevated temperature to get the best post-cure properties - can it (pre)heat to 80C AND cure at the same time? Wasn't clear (maybe I missed it). -- yes it can, sorry - Wash station is totally silly - I don't want my parts crashing into each other while they are in the soft pre-cured state. Currently I keep my parts on the flex plate and put the whole flex plate on an oscillating table inside a glass sealed container and that works really well. Otherwise for loose parts they need to be still and the IPA swirled around them to prevent damage -- exactly! - And probably a few other issues one would uncover during actual use. I had hopes, but alas they are dashed, especially for the asking price. Yes it is kind of like an iPhone, but in all the bad ways. -- and i totally understand that flavour is not for everyone, I'm just glad to finally show something truly next-gen, but is this what people want? most people, probably not. and that's sad because it won't push the technology forward as well as it should
@johnhinkey53367 ай бұрын
@@FauxHammer Thanks for your response. I agree, it's not for everyone. It feels like they are trying to make a mid-level printer between the $1,000 and $10,000 industrial printers, but optimized for figurine printing (which is fine - it's a big market), but they kind of muddied things a bit. Anyways, I may have gotten some things wrong in my comment, but you've set me straight. Much appreciate your reviews and your style!
@BenGi5517 ай бұрын
@@FauxHammer "Perforated build plate - un-usable for direct to plate printing of flat-ish parts that can't have supports or the supports are individual (not on a raft) and smaller than the holes. -- but when printing from the build plate you get expansion of early layers due to excessive curing of base layers. I don;t understand this arguement in resin TBH" As I'm also primarily printing functional pieces (both SLA and FDM) I would like to give my input to your answer. Yes, printing directly to the buildplate can cause "elefants foot" (as you know), but typically a slicer allows for dedicated compensation in the first layers. On parts that need to be dimensionally accurate or have needs for better form tolerances, printing a big flat surface of the model directly to the buildplate can be beneficial. That said, it should be a very easy fix by simply offering a buildplate without the holes (maybe already fitted with some kind of magnetic plate?).
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
@@BenGi551yeah I see the for and against with perforated build plates, I support everything because I don’t trust elephants foot compensation, but I’m not buying one printer and dialing it in. I’m testing 5-10 printers a month. So for me, i guess I just don’t care. I’m sure a flex plate will be available with enough demand
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
@@johnhinkey5336yeah, I think it’s more than mini printing, that’s just my thing, it has its benefits. But I agree. And I worry the market for this printer is not there. And I’ve told HeyGears as much. Hopefully the read these comments and get the message
@radoslawsocha49557 ай бұрын
The difference between this one and Bambu is not being able to use the material you want. No matter how good the machine and software are - that's a killer. They would have a chance if their resin would be affordable but the price is just outrageous. Bambu did it right - yes X1 costs a lot but it's one off cost, their plastic is cheap so running cost is low and purchase of their machine justifiable. I'm just glad to see Bambu approach has started sneaking into resin world.
@Zunip1827 ай бұрын
Can't wait to buy this one. Itll be about a year of saving, but i cant wait.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Glad you like the look of it, it is amazing!
@NoMercyFtw7 ай бұрын
cant wait for the video when u do
@NorTacPaddy7 ай бұрын
Really good vid on this machine. I'm new to resin printing and having a GKTwo for 3 months now with zero failures I don't know what all the fuss is about. I thought I was buying a premium machine and I wasn't wrong or disappointed. GK Two could easily add some of these features into a new unit and probably still bang them out at the same costs. We can still tweek and mess around to our hearts content and keep the cost down using 3rd party resins. Honestly, I'm using sunlu ABS water for convenience. I've dialled it in. I can print without failures at 50 and 30 microns. Despite my best attempts and ignorance the GK Two is proving to be a beast. The price points for everything on the ultracraft system is insane. Thanks again Ross for demystifying 3d printers!!
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Potentially yeah
@Driz7ziahs7 ай бұрын
the fact they got a locked down ecosystem, aren't open for setting adjustments and the price are a hard pass for me. i guess i'll go with the GKtwo at this point. i just have to find a way to with their annoying lid.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
good call
@shawnswc25394 ай бұрын
Hi I enjoyed this video quite a bit it was a intuitive on what I am looking for resin printer. I will definitely look at buying this one down in the future after I dive into buying myself a first resin printer For a beginner. Then I will look at buying this one. Thanks for all the hard work you put in to doing this and I will make sure I will use your information when the time comes to buy this one🎉
@FauxHammer4 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@luppchri6 ай бұрын
As Faux Hammer said, one might appreciate all the ease and comfort the machine is offering despite the high initial price and even more so the expensive running cost. And I also get it that the company wants to ensure with its closed system that you always get the absolutely best results without going through the hassle resin printing brings with it. Having said that, I am a BambuLab printer owner and I love exactly that piece of mind but I also love that, despite being a relatively closed system too, I am still able to use different filaments, can change my print parameters and even have options for another slicer. I do not mind so much that the initial purchase price for the Reflex is quite high, but like many others noted, being stuck with the proprietary resin and unability to tweak settings is also for me a killer argument to not get one. Oh, I nearly forgot, thanks for the great review!
@SkateSoup7 ай бұрын
As the nun said to the priest, no need to apologize for the length. There's a lot going on, and it takes time to cover it, and you did a great job of that speaking as an FDM guy who just watched a 40-minute video about a resin ecosystem. That ecosystem is the key here, and it shows the two sides of the closed ecosystem coin. When you have a system that constricts enough of the potential variables, you can make it a very easy and successful experience for the target audience. The more you open things up, the more you're having to engineer guardrails around "yeah, but some idiot is going to" type situations, which is a rapid tutorial on the law of diminishing returns. Making the process that simple shows who the primary market is. It isn't you or I or a good chunk of your viewers who are willing to learn the underlying technology enough and spend the time to do a stack of test prints with very minor tweaks between them to eke out every possible bit of performance and quality out of a printer. It's the person who has more money than time and just wants to use it as a tool without having to fuss with things. The different UV wavelength and in-house tuned resins for that confirm that's the business plan. There may be good technical reasons for that, but they're not getting their margins on the printer itself selling tens of thousands of units. They're getting it on businesses or people with other expensive hobbies who will happily keep whacking down 70 pounds a kilo, and if they wind up in that very narrow use case with a model that gives the slicer a headache, they're more apt to tweak the model instead of the printer if the modeling or engineering are their background. If their margins are good enough, they can be a very successful company without selling a million printers, just a million kilos of resin. It means cost savings on not needing a huge customer support department as well if their customer base is restricted between the closed system, the printer price, and the running cost. This is likely to cause some heartburn in the hobbyist community, as especially the folks who go down the tribalism rabbit hole cannot live in a world where they're not the most important person in the room. But the company doesn't have to care, as they're making enough from their actual target market. If the company really does care about the technology and the 3d printing community as a whole, they can do things like open sourcing the support generation or contributing in other ways. Prusa have done that in large ways, and they're a low-key similar case as far as target markets go. They came out of the maker community, and they encourage the fans and appreciate the passion because of that, but the financial reality that will probably get me flamed is that their real market is print farms and small businesses, not the hobbyists. They care more about the hobbyists than other companies might because they came from that, but the more we see companies that aren't of those roots, the more we'll see closed ecosystems with innovation in technology and usability that stay closed. It could help the hobbyists, but they don't have to care, they'll still hit their numbers. Bambu is a bit of a peek into that trend. Long term, the X1C isn't a printer for someone who can and will do replacement of the carbon rods. It's someone who will buy it, get 2k+ hours out of it, more than make the money back selling whatever, and if the rods fail, they toss it and buy another. Or have a service contract with someone via the X1E who will come in and replace the larger, more expensive portion for them, so they glue em in and say, "Not user servicable." The closer we get to commodifying printers, the more we'll see that. Hopefully, some of those companies will kick back to the community, but we'll see. I dearly hope we get more companies willing to contribute to the technology for all than we do companies like Stratasys. Good lord, that went on forever, I guess a 40-minute video got me in a wordy space.
@TheDainerss6 ай бұрын
15:20 or someone will create a hacked version of the software/firmware on the machine that exposes the settings. This is purely a software limitation imposed by Hey Guys. The printer is capable of this when you insert a specific resin bottle, so the settings are there, just not exposed to us in the software. Another option is to reverse engineer the device on the bottle and create your own with the right settings.
@Rottweiler123677 ай бұрын
Thanks for taking the time to make all of your videos. I am researching 3D printing and yes this is the printer that I want. I am more interested in being a creator than a technician.
@panamafred16 ай бұрын
My wife and I just came to this same conclusion. "Spend the money" she said, "Enjoy your old age exploring your creativity, not figuring out technical issues." I love this woman!
@Emtbtoday5 ай бұрын
Looks like sunlu resin out the bottle, probably why cheap and so good! Sorry I can't say a bad word about sunlu Solid gray ABS best switch I've ever made used it for a year now with no issues and just works and absolutely solid! Stuff just doesn't break easy it's amazing! Same as sister company jayo abs
@deucedeuce15727 ай бұрын
It's terrible that the chemicals are so toxic. I hope we get good, inexpensive, non-toxic resin for these in the future or that something better is invented. It would be cool to own one of these, but that's just too much to deal with for me and a lot of other people. I also don't think they can print anything with real strength or use. They're just for nice looking models as far as I know.
@larry849037 ай бұрын
As someone whose printer just died, this machine looks incredibly enticing. The only thing that is keeping me on the fence is the closed eco system. I have a bunch of resin in storage waiting for a new printer. This resin would all go to waste if i made the switch. I think that people should be able to calibrate and use their resin of choice. Heygear have clearly gone above and beyond with the printer and slicer features. If they went the extra mile, they could also make a system that can calibrate resin with far less time and hassle than the current method, and i think that would make this printer a must buy. Sure, not as many people will buy their resin, but having a printer with all of these features and a better resin calibration method would make them the best brand in the hobby and truely the "bambu labs" of resin printing.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Agreed
@larry849037 ай бұрын
@@FauxHammer would you take one of these over the GK2?
@hackslashminis7 ай бұрын
So I only recently made the switch to Uniformation after watching Ross's videos (which I am super grateful for. I love my GKTwo) and now the auto supports, print quality and quality of life options this video shows on the Reflex almost has me wanting to make this printer my next purchase. However, not being able to use a different resin that would give more of a durable model will force me to wait until they are able to at least provide a resin as Ross suggested is somewhere between their current miniatures resin and the more durable one and hopefully with an option of refills to bring the cost of the resin down a bit (like Bambu does with their filament). I can't tell you how many times I watched a player at the table drop or break a printed and painted miniature so even with all of the ease that this printer is presenting if the miniature ends up printed in a brittle material. I would rather spend the $$ up front for a reliable and relatively hands off tool so that I can fiddle less time with hobbying on the printer so I can get back to sculpting minis.
@joseph_n7 ай бұрын
I got one a couple days ago as my first resin printer. It feels like a well thought out product. I do wish they had more engineering resins. But so far I'm very happy
@Gregatron133 ай бұрын
I particularly love the oart where you gush sbout the printer oozing quality, then show footage of your reflection doing something and your hand is off screen...
@Blue-eu5qn7 ай бұрын
Chill out everyone, I refill my bottles with Siraya Tech Resin and it works just fine. I know you all want to tweak the settings but "Imagine if I told you..." you dont have to. Ive made minis and 10 inch statues with their settings and everything comes out perfect. But the absolute best thing about this printer is the software. You really have to use it to understand how far ahead it is from other slicers. I click auto arrange, hollow, auto support and Im done. I use a small Blink camera inside to monitor my prints fyi
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Thanks this is a super interesting comment, and you;re exactly who I want to hear from. So you have this $2k printer where the main benefit is preconfigured settings. But you use a thirsd party resin where the settings are close-enough to ok for you? So I have 2 questions depending on which scenario is right. 1. Have you tested your sirayatech against one of the existing profiles (which one on the printer and which ST resin are you using as proxy) and have you done measureable exposure tests between the two resins to determine the exact same printe result? If so, thats exactly what people wnat to know, Which resin gives the exact results you get with one of the Ultraprint resins, and which ultrprint resin is it matching, If you;ve done that test, you comment could save people $1000s 2. if you have not done that test but have decided the ST resin is good enough for your print quality needs, fair enough. But what value does this $2000 printer actually give you...? Genuinely excited to see your reply
@Blue-eu5qn6 ай бұрын
Hi@@FauxHammer, I did initially and they looked the same to me following your videos of what to look for. Keep in mind this is my first resin printer. I've been holding off for years with resin because I've watched all the videos and seen the complaints. I played around with the slicers and it just wasn't for me. Until now. I've done as much as I can with FDM and I wanted to start airbrushing. I was about to jump in with the UniFormation from your video which seemed to look pretty solid but then I saw your initial look at the Reflex in the suggested videos. Everything I didn't like about the UniFormation was improved upon with this Reflex printer. Mainly the clean up, software, auto refill and WiFi which is a huge thing for me. Little did I know at the time just how powerful their software was. I ended up joining their live demo online where you could ask questions during the holidays. They gave out Black Friday codes on top of the Christmas sale price, so I ended up saving around $300 - $400. Setting it up was simple and user friendly. I had no issues and started up Blueprint Studio. There is no way to describe how amazing this software is. I can see you trying to stress this point in your video, but I don't think viewers understand based on the comments. Their software is better than Bambu Labs in my opinion. I'm pretty sure you could do an entire video on the software. The way they have the process in tabs at the top broken down into Prepare, Support, Layout and Slice is so smart. It allows a novice to learn the process in steps rather than throwing everything at you all at once like most slicers. I genuinely enjoy preparing my models with this software, it's... fun. So to answer your question. The software. It's what Hey Gears offers that no one else can right now. I hated tweaking Cura profiles for FDM so much that I bought a Bambu. Their software allows me easy functionality with the ability to monitor my prints from anywhere on my phone to pause, skip or stop anything I need to after it notifies me something might be wrong. All from the phone in my pocket. The way things are going all the printers are catching up to each other in terms of speed and quality. The only thing that will set them apart soon enough is the software. And right now Bambu and Hey Gears sit on top of that mountain in my opinion. I really appreciate your videos, they helped me make the most informed decision I could at the time and I'm 110% satisfied with the Reflex. Here is the resin I use if you would like to test it out. I use it with the miniature settings in Blueprint. Siraya Tech 2kg Build 3D Printer Resin - High Resolution, Non-Brittle, Tappable Engineering Resin - Ideal for LCD DLP 3D Printing 8K Capable (Sonic Grey, 2kg)
@babbagebrassworks42787 ай бұрын
Printer farmers should love this printer. If you are doing 3D resin printing as a business this looks like a great option. Cleaning up the supports takes time, dialing in resin /print times is also a pain. This is plug and produce machine, not plug n play. Very impressed, but I love my Anycubic tough resin.
@markbooth30667 ай бұрын
I don't think print farmers will. At 4x to 6x the resin cost it will hit their bottom line hard, and they already have the expertise to dial in the optimal settings themselves anyway.
@babbagebrassworks42787 ай бұрын
@@markbooth3066 You could be right, I just ordered my second Mono 2, cheap and I have spare parts. Maybe first timers who just want to print and have money?
@sykodmon7 ай бұрын
Ross well done video, TONS of points to cover, and you hit them in as timely a manner as you could. When i first saw this printer system a year or so ago i was in amazement. the sticker shock was expected. The cost of resin was the ultimate turn off. I only have one resin Printer (Saturn 2) and i can go thru 10kg of resin in less than a month, not every month but its happened a few times. 10 Bottles of resin on the Hey Gears machine would cost more than getting a GK2, which is also a premium printer, and a few bottles to get you going. I get the VERY closed source options produce the best results, but the resin 3d printer market is dominated by companies like Elegoo for a reason, In expensive printers that do the job. The Blueprint slicer looks like a reskin of Voxel Dance Tango, just with a better smart support system. Tango has a learning curve to it and can produce result just like what we see from Blue print with just a bit of effort. In the furfure i believe Ross, and any other Influencer, will only use the Reflex when HeyGears sends them resin.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
You are correct, Even I will not buy resin for this. I will use what they send and that is it. it's just too expensive.
@LegalEliminator5 ай бұрын
if we want a bambu style printer in the resin space, that also means allowing the user to choose whatever resin they want to use. bambu have been completely open with allowing whatever filament to be used at any point so long as the model allows for it (like hardened nozzles n such). this printer will remain niche so long as the officially supported resin list stays as only their own brand.
@kghiii3 ай бұрын
Elegoo mars 5 ultra will be the Bambu of the resin world for the common folk. Right price point, works out of the box, and you can use whatever resin you want
@ianroberts30517 ай бұрын
The air compressor to allow for super small support contact points looks amazing. I am hoping that gets wider adoption.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
agreed
@PaulBraddock6 ай бұрын
Formlabs had a slide in vat, auto resin fill and a heater, and great, industrial build quality in 2015 with the Form 2. This machine feels very Formlabs.
@GRIZZLYSGEAR7 ай бұрын
If I had the money to buy everything (I mean the whole kit and caboodle) and keep on buying the resin, then yes. I would use this just like a normal paper printer, you select the file and print it. Just like paper printers, the proprietary ink/resin is always going to cost a lot, that's how they make their money before the cheap ink/resin brands come in. You just have to wait for the amount of owners to increase to the point that it becomes a viable option for resin companies to start producing substitute resins for the machine, and then the prices will drop. The machine itself may drop in price as well, but that's not guaranteed...
@BozzworthTheRogue7 ай бұрын
Great vid and deep dive into this printer! I've been on the fence on getting one of these for a while... even at the price down here in Aus (over 2k). That closed eco-system and inability to tweak settings are deal breakers though. If they provided the feature set they have while still allowing for resins from other parties and fine tuning of exposure etc it'd be a done deal for me, but as it is the GKTwo or Saturn 3 Ultra are far more likely to be my next printer purchase.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Fair choice
@bigtexuntex78256 ай бұрын
The heater function of the curing station isn't for drying, it is for enhanced curing. Turn the heat on, cure with /both/ heat and uv for better strength in your models.
@AustinLindstrom7 ай бұрын
I hope the thing competitors take from this shot across the bow is improving Slicers and Auto Supports. Those Supports look basically magic.
@JorenMathews7 ай бұрын
This. The hardware has been plenty good for years, but the software is still way behind. Auto supporting is a very solvable problem, and it's surprising no one has done it well.
@michealwheeler15047 ай бұрын
I hope this printer does well, and that the industry listens. Myself, I haven’t gotten a printer yet because I don’t have the time or energy to have a new hobby. But I’m still interested (enough to watch your whole video), and if there was a plug and play printer system I could afford maybe it would be time to jump in.
@mururoa70247 ай бұрын
The Bambu Lab filaments are roughly the same price as any other brand, and their printers work with any other brand. Hint hint, nod nod Heygears.
@jasonwiltjer94 ай бұрын
I think they could learn some more from Bambu Lab. Bambu has its own filament that is super well optimized for the system and enables the printer to know what color and material you are using automatically (if you have an AMS) but you are also able to use whatever document you want. This should be how this resin printer works. Give advantages to using first party resin, but allow users to use their own. Also they should add an advanced node that enables all the normal settings you can access in other printers. Many people would never need those settings, but a lot of people would.
@jec54767 ай бұрын
This is an important printer. I don't think it will win, but people will look back and say it inspired the winner. The problem is that this particular printer-resin combination is optimized for what they think you want rather than what you want, and you pay a hefty price for a near miss. One of the points of having a 3D printer is to make what you want without it being a near miss.
@VincentVeak7 ай бұрын
Hey there I have a question about this unit that I can't find out online and was curious about the support quality when working with flat/geometric surfaces. I am considering this unit for printing electronic shells and mechanical prototypes, and a lot of samples I see are primarily about minis. I'm accustomed to printing flat on the print bed historically, but given the holes and nature of the auto supports (which don't get me wrong, I'm all for convenience!) it seems that printing directly on the bed for something like a rectangular case isn't feasible. How is the quality of printing like a box? Often times with most resin printers you'll see sagging, stair stepping, or need a larger amount of supports which can lead to scarring/dimples/support marks and unfortunately for me, surface quality and finish are very important to my work. Side question, does this device support any kind of fuzzy skin/texturing to make a matte or satin finish? Normally I'd use UV Tools and apply some noise filters, but that wouldn't be an option here, so maybe I'd have to do it on the models themselves unless the parts actually come out with a satin finish, which may be the case? It's tricky to tell without holding a part in hand lol. In regards to your video and comments I've seen about this: First off, great video. I think you explained the objective facts with a very fair and prefaced personal bias for us to make our own educated decisions. I know a lot of people are looking at this from a hobbyist perspective, but I think for a small business where you're cranking out hundreds or even thousands of parts, but injection molding is not viable or economical, this is a good solution. Some people don't want to spend hours setting up prints and troubleshooting/dialing stuff in when we have other things we would prefer to invest our time in. I wouldn't really buy this for personal use, but in the context of running my business, there is a lot of potential with this machine
@ReedCBowman4 ай бұрын
If they opened the print settings so that you could adjust things for your environment and circumstances, and ideally for the community to figure out the right settings for the other resins out there that HeyGears won't print, I'd buy this immediately, yes, even with the price. But in this craft, it's silly to make something that prevents a community of power users from building around it. They would cut your profits a little by showing people how to use other resins, sure (and hopefully how to hook up a less annoying compressor). But they would become your biggest fans and proselytes. This is what you need.
@FauxHammer4 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@Sylux687 ай бұрын
Don't really care if I can't tweak settings, when they provide consistant good print. But I'll be interested in the v2 or v3 when the price will drop by 50%. I mean, for a majority of people, it's still a hobby (yes there are expensive hobby but we don't all get 3k$/month) For the resine, sure get the first bottle special shape. But at least sale resin in bag to refill that bottle (you know environment things) The compressor thing seems good (perhaps the noise), could it be integrate in the printer base ? Anyway, I'll still love my GK Two for now, but it's a fantastic machine for the market and the future of 3D Printing !
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
absolutely fair pooints to make
@robhall56227 ай бұрын
As it happens I'm in the market for a new printer, as my voxelab is feeling rather old hat these days. I'd never heard of HeyGear until your video, and the printer sounds incredible, but those limitations on tweaking settings and using other resins are just too much I think. It feels like their slicer needs an "advanced" mode that gives access to various hidden settings like exposure etc, while allowing people to print out of the box of they want.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Yep, I hear you
@SupaaMann7 ай бұрын
Can't wait for uniformation to respond to this to win back your affection
@ScottStoneUnforgivenII7 ай бұрын
I by no means could just buy this. I'd certainly consider saving up or putting this on credit for a well made machine, as I did for my X1C. The lack of a filter is disappointing. The closed and expensive resin system is also very disappointing. I understand why it's there, but if it's my machine (especially at this price) I want the option to use whatever resin I want. Even Bambu allows 3rd party filament. Edit: As soon as the 3rd party X1Plus firmware came out, I installed it. It's my printer. Even with the warranty getting voided for it. Could never get a hold of customer service anyway. No big loss.
@drewb90227 ай бұрын
Yeah, the lock down approach is pretty off putting, I own a bambu lab x1, and I'm looking to buy a resin printer and have been for a while now, but what stops me is that it doesn't seem like a resin printer brand has managed the user experience that bambu has, so when I read the title of this video, I honestly got a little excited, and mostly through out this video, but even bambu lab lets you use other filaments from other brands, while giving you a reason to use theirs by adding the RF tags, I mostly buy Bambu lab's filament for that reason, sure I could setup my own profile setting for each filament, save a few bucks but, what can I say, I'm lazy, I honestly was on the edge of picking this printer, with so many user friendly features, it felt like bambu lab's ease of use, and the print quality, just amazing, all and all this printer seems great and I honestly think it is, for me it just comes down to if I want to support a lock down mindset, and honestly, that answer is leaning towards no. I really want to get into resin printing but I feel like I'm waiting for not just the same ease of use level of bambu lab's X1, but also a company that lets users a reasonable amount of freedom of what they want to use in their printer. I feel like HeyGear has open the door for another company to steal the top spot from them, basically copy the new features of this printer and make one of their own that isn't as lock down, I feel like reviews for the Reflex will always point out the lock down only their resin works approach, I'd be surprised if another company doesn't notice that, and takes advantage of that, taking the top spot that could of been theirs, for me, I think I'll continue to wait for the right resin printer.
@Ezemv7 ай бұрын
Really great video! I disagree with the conclusion because I think this printer could be less geared to the current 3D printing market but towards expanding the user base. To expand your own analogy about this printer being an iPhone the current market is more like Android. With enough tinkering, configuring and customizing (setups and resins) you can get amazing results at the cost of a steeper initial learning curve. Apple carved a huge chunk of the market because their walled garden approach and ease of use appealed to people who just did not want to bother with that and would not otherwise have used a smartphone. Again great video and I appreciate your own unique voice in this space
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Oh yeah and good way to expand on the analogy. I think where we are at now though is this is the iPhone and all the other Printers are Nokias of the same era. So I’m excited to see what the Android printer looks like, because that is what most people will want, only if this begins to dominate market share, which I doubt it will
@kirillberezin88592 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot for the detailed review
@jishani15 ай бұрын
The prints look nice, and the features are good. But i'd never buy a printer where you're locked into expensive proprietary resin. They design a product to be easy to use, and then incentivize you to not use it. I'll wait for them to decide they want their product to appeal to a wider audience.
@denismichel83857 ай бұрын
Maker's philosophy is to reduce costs by doing instead of buying. How many wargames miniatures (and liters of costly resin) should we print to justify such a stratospheric price ? Only for professionals, I guess.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
i think that is the aim, print masters on this and cast the rest.
@RookieRay7 ай бұрын
I would actually buy a Bambu resin printer but this aint it
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
fair
@TheKnightArgent7 ай бұрын
Damn, this printer looks absolutely fantastic. The sticker shock is REAL, tho. I do wish they'd offer bottles without the special caps or something.
@soaringspoon7 ай бұрын
No 3rd party Resins are 100% a miss for me. You need the company to continue to exist, or you have an expensive brick because they don't allow you to dial in settings. Hope they don't decide resins prices are too cheap, and it's time to dial up the price because you're dependent on their singular whims. If it does well, hope they do better than Bubmbu does, keeping their resin in stock because they are all you got GLOBALLY lol. HeyGear's horrible choice seems more like what Bambu haters claim Bambu is doing to the 3DFM industry. The tech is amazing, what they built is amazing. The lack of resin support is a death bell for so so so many reasons.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
yep, this is a fair concern and especially from a new and unknown brand
@uwegraf80136 ай бұрын
Is the Uniformation GK2 still your favorit printer? Or would you go for the UltrCraft Reflex?
@FauxHammer6 ай бұрын
If I had the money for the reflex and the resins suited my purpose. easily the reflex. but I like flexibility in my choices, so I'll stick with the GKTWO.
@uwegraf80136 ай бұрын
Thank you 👍
@JonGritton5 ай бұрын
If you ignore the proprietary resin, it seems like the only downside here is the weird wash machine. What would you recommend as an alternative washer?
@tinkerman-q5 ай бұрын
I am a hardcore FDM tinkerman, I know no-one else in the world has the same printer I have, because even the wiring is custom. But I'd dread go through all of it again on Resin printing. So this would be perfect for me. Except it is miles away from what I am willing to spend on the setup, let alone maintenance (including the raw material). So, no. I will wait....
@CoreySosner4 ай бұрын
First off, Thanks for this review. I’m brand new to 3D printing and want a printer with this review I think I’ve found it. Time is $ you hit the nail on the head I want a mid priced machine that I press a button and print. That’s what I’m looking for. I want a machine that will allow me to make statues for my personal collection I’m not looking to go into business. Thanks again for this honest review
@StephenBoyd217 ай бұрын
By the sound of it, this is the Rolls Royce of 3D, resin, printers. Unfortunately, I have no desire to own a Rolls Royce because I do not have money to keep throwing at it. It may be better than other printers but it, and it's consumables, are way more expensive that other printers. I am just not the target market for this printer.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
yep, exactly
@barpfoto7 ай бұрын
I would really like to see how this thing performs on scale model detail parts. The truth is that wargaming minis are about the easiest thing you can print. It’s almost impossible to screw them up. A 1/48 scale 500 pound bomb on the other hand… A much simpler shape… Which is why it’s much harder to get a very good print. and it’s why so many of us are trying to print at 10 µm and this thing only giving you 30 makes me have questions.
@elektix17 ай бұрын
Im off to pick up my EKTwo today based off your reviews! I've used industrial FDM printers for years and recently started playing with a Formlabs resin printer aswell. When I couldn't afford a Bambu and started to lose the love for FDM because of the limitiations on detail and high price point, I took a cursory look at resin consumer printers, not expecting to be drawn in... until your EKTwo review... I nearly panicked seeing this video that I'd already bought a defunct machine before I'd even obtained it! 😂 Having worked with industrial printers, there is absolutely no way I'd ever buy a locked down machine for home... between the price point and inability to keep up with innovations in materials, they very quickly become more of a hinderance than a benefit...
@nobodyuknow49117 ай бұрын
While it's not ultimately the printer for me, I definitely support the ideas behind it and genuinely hope that the other makers of resin 3D printers take notes and begin to mirror the advances made. Competition is always better for the customer, and drives the companies to excel rather than resting on their laurels of the last thing they did.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Yep, I can see this happening. My hope is that HeyGears caves and opens it up
@nobodyuknow49117 ай бұрын
@@FauxHammer Well, the hardware is easy enough to examine for what it's doing and what parts it has. The software can be replicated in overall function, hopefully with a more open interface for the user to adjust to their needs. What will be the sticking point is the time frame and getting it "down to a cost" to not only do the same or better, while costing less, and using whatever resins the user supplies.
@miguellopez33926 ай бұрын
9:50 the pen that was developed to write in space is one of the most commercial sold pens in existence making back its development cost several times over, even their competitors switch to using pens in space because graphite pencils could contaminate electronics in a space station.
@mackmind7 ай бұрын
The xp2 test is awesome, never seen something like this. How about testing HeyGears resin on other printer and dialing xp2 test for a cross check? What I love: release film tension sensors, heated resin vat. What I like and is so easy to implement that it is surreal that it isn't a standard yet: easy release build plate, reflective inner curing station (you can fix it yourself for almost free), double layer curing station, more pronounced resin exit on vat. What I like too: perforated build plate (for less suction?), door in front of curing station What is overengineered here: resin feed, vat structure, surely cleaning station. Curious: prm pumping station if it can be done any cheaper, 385um wavelength to transfer more energy Don't care: predefined resin settings, other slicers seem to bring this feature too and don't require special resin since it is community driven
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
All good points
@philgee4866 ай бұрын
This might be the best and most interesting printer vid I've watched It is about a printer I plain can't afford, but it's still fascinating because these features will be copied and produced on future printer ranges which will eventually make the price almost affordable. Or HeyGears can compromise their engineering choices just enough to compete in a wider market than this. I have been known to lie to the wife about hobby spending. The lawnmower might "die" again, the car may need an expensive "repair", sometimes these things happen around the same time as a hobby purchase.
@philgee4866 ай бұрын
Quality of the vid can't be faulted, they got it right when they sent it to you
@Grave796 ай бұрын
When they build a follow up printer that has the option to use my own resin, I'm all over it. Everything else about it is amazing. Sure, prices are high, but I'm 100% willing to drop a cool $3K on the printer + cure station + PRM if it delivers even half of what you showed. I mean, not having to deal with Lychee's broken "stable" release that corrupts my files (oh just use the beta! ...that also corrupts my files, but in a different way! but I digress...) is a godsend. But paying all that just to be locked into $80 bottles of resin from a single company I've never heard of until now.... uh.... no. Definitely excited for the future though.
@davevout58767 ай бұрын
We are in the process of setting up a small-batch consumer products company and have recently ordered a number of GK two's. Love the concept of this Heygears unit as it has the potential of minimal fettling. Unfortunately the cost of the resin would render the units impractical as it would push our product price-points too high. P.S. Great video. As alway's, informative, concise and candid. All in an East-Midlands accent. What's not to like :)
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
I have a Geordie accent I could use too.
@TheMorrowgamer7 ай бұрын
For the price of the unit itself, and with the cost of what they have made proprietary material I can in no way justify it. I like having the option to print different materials. They don't even have some options that would be wanted from consumers. However the printer excels in the field of "We made this an appliance that anyone can use. But the cost of that is our walled garden." Their approach makes Bambu's approach look open source...
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Yep, exactly this
@edwardjohnson55277 ай бұрын
What a great printer! But as 90% of commenters are saying, the closed ecosystem, lack of access to print settings, and the price are deal-breakers. Realistically, the price is probably the biggest hurdle. I'll never be rich enough to spend more on a printer than I did for my Saturn 3 Ultra. If money was no issue, I probably wouldn't be bothered about the limited resin choice or print settings. Here's hoping that these features trickle down into the cheaper market segment.
@FauxHammer7 ай бұрын
Yep, I just hope HeyGears listens to this, because they didn’t listen to me when I told them. It’s their call of course, but we’ll see what happens
@TheLoneBit7 ай бұрын
I was on the fence about it being only 33μm. I've never 3D printed before at all but I want to pick it up as a hobby. $3,000 for the whole kit + resins starting out is too rich for my blood so it won't be my first 3D printer but I will consider Hey Gears in the future. Sucks that there is no 3rd Party support so I can't experiment with it but for me that just means it is more specialized. Your test print more than shows that they know what they're doing. When I go pro I do want to pick one of these up though. I need the the smoothest prints I can get cause I want to make 3D-printed masters for high fidelity Platinum Silicone mold making. Something like this would be huge if I can minimize any stepping. I also want to use it for Mini Figs naturally. So one day, but not today. I think I will start off with the Elegoo 9K. The full kit is around my budget and from what I have seen it does pretty decent prints.
@craigcook51217 ай бұрын
I would certainly buy it as less work for great results is always a good thing. Cheaper resin would be a good thing and they would sell even more units
@maxpower80806 ай бұрын
Another great video, thanks. I would love to hear more about your support setting