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by dlpower 790 days ago
Open platform allows you to use non formlabs resins, it works fine but tbh what you pay for with formlabs is getting the perfect prints every time. The form 3 works so well because all of the resins have such optimized settings and you can just let it print without worrying about issues. If you want to use some other resin I doubt you would see as high of a success rate.
2 comments

> but tbh what you pay for with formlabs is getting the perfect prints every time.

My 45 email chain with Formlabs would beg to differ.

I'm being a little bit silly. The reason for the (over)engineering of their products is to be as turn key as possible, and this includes materials. I give them credit for the ambition to try to be the "Apple" of 3d printing. I'm not 100% negative on Formlabs, and they've certainly played an important part in making even resin printing more mainstream and accessible to the consumer. That OG Form was the printer everyone wanted at the time, and for good reason. Not to mention the geometries we're printing are especially tricky (by design). So although I sound pretty negative in most of the comments here, all in all I both understand and respect what Form is trying to do. Things just... aren't as easy as they try to make them out to be.

Yeah for sure, I see where you are coming from. I have used a form 3 a lot (4k of materials) and have my own form 2 and for my uses it has worked super well. There are certainly blind spots but for the consumer they are targeting who wants to print parts and not think about the details it is pretty slick.

I think for what it is worth formlabs has a pretty unique position in the market where their printers are low enough in price where they have to compete with enthusiast printers which makes it tough. If what you are looking for is a machine that you can tweak and set up exactly how you want it, formlabs isn't ideal. But for people who are not interested in working on a printer and just want parts to appear in the printer I d not think that anyone else does that better.

I guess "allows" in the same way HP "allows" you to only use their ink. Fantastic, and only (at least) $6k for the privilege of using my hardware as I see fit
yeah the 6k is wild for sure, if you are looking to not use formlabs resin why would you buy a formlabs printer though?

The biggest advantage of formlabs in my mind is the ecosystem, the resins just work out of the box and you do not have to try and fine tune things. If I wanted to use Loctite or some other resin company (price per L is comparable) I would just buy a anycubic printer.

I do get where you are coming from though, I am not a drm fan but I am just curious why you would not just go with a different printer.