The reality is that “just works” is going to outsell just about everything, including high ground on morals and privacy. If competitors want to keep up they’re going to have to offer models that don’t require any tinkering/tweaking even if doing so is possible, supported, and encouraged.

Yeah... The market is still shifting in response to the X1C.

10 years ago... I would manually level my ender, religiously monitor it, and still deal with a decently high failure rate (esp for anything other than PLA). Tuning the printer took easily as much time as I actually spent printing with it. I upgraded all the things, flashed firmware, ran octoprint, etc...

It was like driving - gotta keep the hands on the wheel and maintain alertness at all times. It was an activity that required my attention and focus.

Then I caved and got an X1C in 2023. It's... a really, REALLY good machine.

It's like flying somewhere. I get on the plane, start up a movie or a book, and someone wakes me up when the flight is over. It's a tool that is doing things for me while I do other stuff.

I'm at the point where I'm not really interested in the "middle" all that much. Either go with a Voron and get the "I'm driving" feeling if that's what you want. Or get a Bambu and get chauffeured to successful print.

The 3D printing community is really two different groups: people who like to actually print things and people who like to tinker with their printer.

I hate this false dichotomy. Plenty of people like both.

People that buy expensive consumer grade printers are just satisfied with mediocre results because they don’t know any better.

To get great quality prints you need to actually know how the tool you are using works and what are its strengths and weaknesses.

I agree entirely with your first two sentences (I like both).

But I disagree pretty hard with the rest of it. An X1C spits out prints that are higher quality than my ender 3 would do, in a variety of materials the ender couldn't handle, even with a HUGE amount of time understanding the ender and how it works (incl upgrading or replacing just about every component).

Further - I think some of the divide is between the folks printing models, and the folks printing functional parts.

When I print nice models (ex: toys for my kids or gifts) then sure - I tweak still because appearances matter.

But if I just want a functional print because I need an enclosure for an electronics project, or I want a hanger for my wall, or I need a new footpad for a desk... Mediocre is a-ok.

And again... The X1C is not spitting out mostly mediocre parts. If anything - the "learning" you need to do mostly lives in the slicers/models at this point.

If I can get great quality prints without having to tinker, I don’t see how it’s a false dichotomy.

You can get decent prints, but that is true of every modern 3d printer basically.

Or the expensjve consumer grade improves to a point where you can get quality prints too, and you just become the old man yelling at clouds.