Felix 2.0 3D printer
Introduction
We got the Felix 2.0 on october 25 2013 and we never got around providing more documentation. We bought it assembled and it worked out of the box. As of november 2015 it is still working fine.
See also:
- Category: Felix 3D printer (includes all Felix related articles plus some links)
- Configuration imprimante 3D Felix 2.0 (in french, some tips for beginners)
As of oct. 2013 it was the printer we recommend for educational settings and for four reasons:
- It prints as well as any other good printer
- It's light-weight and easily transportable (as opposed to some heavy no better models that seem to popular in the print media)
- It prints with PLA. ABS fumes may not be too healthy.
- It's reliable
As of January 2016, we recommend the Felix Pro 1 3D printer. Of course, we cannot guarantee that it is the best choice. Since there is no universal benchmark test covering all types of use cases, buying the best printer becomes a question of picking the right priorities. Our recommendation is based on the fact that after 2 weeks of using it, we consider it a reliable, easy to use machine with a good print quality that is up to current standards. With respect to other machines, it has self-calibration of the print bed that works (calibration is the #1 reasons why beginners cannot print on other machines), a smart dual-head system, strong extruders, and a removable platform
Although we don't own a Felix 3.x we can recommend it too. See also the Felix 3D printer article. It describes a model we bought in 2012 and that it is still working fine. The 3.1 is basically the same design improved in several aspects. Daniel K. Schneider (talk) 23:22, 5 November 2015 (CET)
Slicer and control software
As for the 1.0 model, Felix distributes its own packaged distribution of Slicers and user interfaces for 3D printers, i.e. the Repetierhost software and two includes slicers. The slicers include several settings, e.g. "normal" and "quality" as well as a setting for printing spare parts.
As I argued in many other contexts, there is no such thing as universal settings. Some types of model require adjustments of the slicing parameters (not done so far). That being said, the printer does print out of the box...
First adjustments
After the first print, we decided that the platform needed some recalibration. X/Y=0 was higher than X/Y=max which is not good when printing large objects. Therefore we lowered the X/Y=0 corner. After homing the printhead it was really close and should have adjusted the Z-sensor a bit. Since the first layer is mission critical to the kinds of objects we want to print, we left the setting as is (some tiny fraction of mm). That scratched the Kapton tape and we then (only) adjusted the screw that lowers/raises the Z-position homing sensors.
To the right is a little video of the first print.
Pictures of the next two prints (after adjusting the print bed)
As you can see, the slicing is not totally optimal, and we will have to import our old Lego styles and also play with temperature. Both creating Legos and 3D lettering is tricky...