I was looking at the AMS Lite and they're not shipping until end of month (at best). Then I looked at the A1 Combo, and I can get the A1 (with larger bed than my current mini) AND AMS Lite for only $240 more than JUST the AMS Lite for my A1 Mini. Basically, buying the A1 Combo means getting the A1 printer for $150. I mean...it's almost like MAKING money buying it as a combo, right?... RIGHT?!
"Think of the savings!" This is how my co-owner and I buy avionics. And that's why I'm poor.
Absolutely! I went and looked and that's a good price on that combo. I've been so impressed with the X1, I thought a lot of their early claims were total BS, but it's everything they said it would be. Really interested to see what their new one is going to be like. I've heard it's bigger, but that's the only thing I've seen leaked so far.
Bambu is so far ahead of most of the rest of the industry already that it gets hard to imagine what they're going to do next.
I suppose one could take some guesses based on reasons why you might still buy something else:
1) Size. My printer is larger than any of the Bambu ones. Though I haven't printed any single items that were too large for the Bambu's 256^3 volume, I have been able to print more things at once that way. This one is pretty obvious which is probably why it's out there.
2) Faster filament changes. I honestly don't know how long the X1C MMS takes but I was speaking with the owner of a filament company at a recent Maker Faire and he was showing me how far back the X1C MMS has to pull the filament, and that takes a fair bit of time away from a printer that hangs its hat on speed. The A1 MMS Lite is actually much better in this regard.
3) Less filament waste - The Prusa XL's technique of using multiple tool heads rather than switching and purging is far superior if you do a lot of multi-material printing. It seems like multicolor especially, as well as multi-material, have gotten very popular in the past year or two with all of the MMS units available, but you can sure waste a lot of filament that way.
And for Bambu, it seems like bringing 3D printing to a much wider audience is a primary goal, so I wouldn't be surprised to see them take more steps to make 3D printing even more accessible.