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Bambu Lab P1P

Knowledge collection of Guides, Upgrades, Prints, Mods, Instructions and Communities for the Bambu Lab
P1P printer

General Info
 Manufacturer: Bambu Lab

 Specification and technical parameters

 Bambu Lab Wiki

Guides
Assembly Instructions
Unboxing

 A general guide to unboxing the P1P by Bambu Lab Wiki

 Bambu Lab P1P: Official Unboxing by Bambu Lab

Hotend / Nozzle

 Complete hotend assembly by Bambu Lab Wiki

 Easy Way to Change or Upgrade Your BambuLab P1P Nozzle by Nikko Industries

 How to Install the Bambu Lab P1P (and X1) Hardened Steel Extruder Gear Assembly by 3D
Rundown
Maintenance Guides
 Maintenance Recommendation by Bambu Lab Wiki

 Manual Bed Leveling by Bambu Lab Wiki

 10 Bambu Lab Maintenance Steps You MUST Do! by The Edge of Tech

 Bambu Lab P1P/X1 Wartung. Sinn und Unsinn. by Nachdenksport (german)

Calibration
 Extrusion Calibration in Bambu Studio by Bambu Lab Wiki

 Bambu Lab P1P - EINFACH GUT!👍👍 by Nachdenksport (german)

 Filament Flow Kalibrieren. PrusaSlicer + Bambu Studio  by Nachdenksport (german)

 Orca Slicer Calibration Guide on Github

 The naked truth - Stress Test Full Print Bed by yahbluez

Reduce Printer Noise


 Decouple Printer from Desk

o Seriously the BEST $2 3D printer upgrade! by CNC Kitchen

 Enclose Printer

o build or print Enclosure

 Enclose in a Cabinet

o Finally finished the cabinet for my X1C by u/deepspacetraveller

Reviews
 The Best 3D Printer of 2022 got Stripped Down to make it Cheaper! by CNC Kitchen

 Best Bambu Lab P1P 3d Printer Upgrades! by ModBot

 Bambu Lab P1P REVIEW - HOW GOOD IS IT REALLY ?! by 247printing


 Unboxing the Bambu Labs P1P: First impressions! (Livestream) by More Layers (Thomas
Sanladerer)

Upgrades
official by Bambu Lab
Bambu Lab AMS - Automatic Material System

 Product Page

 AMS Intruction

 P1P AMS Connection Guide

 Unboxing and How to Install BambuLab AMS on a P1P 3D Printer  by 3D Rundown

Mods

 Hydra AMS - Enhanced Bambu Lab AMS by humebeam

 How to repair and strengthen the roller support in the AMS

 Silica Desiccant Dry box for Bambu Lab AMS by UnchainedAi

 Slica dry box for Bambulab AMS fitting the roller repairs  by Lloyd Keays

 AMS Roller Riser by Lev 3DD

 Bambu AMS Disconnect Tool by Jody

Reviews

 Bambu Lab X1/P1P AMS | Mehrfarbiger 3D Druck | IDEX, Dual Extruder, MMU? by

mpoxDE (german)

Auxiliary Part Cooling Fan

 Wiki Page

 Product Page
Mods

 P1P Aux Fan Cover Panel by SkyGuy

Monitoring chamber camera

 Wiki Page

 Product Page

LED Light & Light Shell

 Wiki Page

 Product Page

Mods

 Bambu Lab P1P Modified LED Mount by Brody

 Bambu Lab P1P Modified LED Mount 2.0 by Brody

unofficial
Enclosure

 Printable Enclosures

 Bambu Lab P1P Vision Gehäuse by Netlaser (Europe)

 Bambu Labs P1P 3D printer Enclosure Kit by Clearview Plastics

o Video + Thread on Reddit by u/ClearviewCustoms

 Picture Frames as Sidepanels

Fans

 Adding MC board fan by u/Goliadthedark

Hotend + Nozzle

 Fast 3D printing is bad for Strength! (and how to fix it!) by CNC Kitchen
Printable Things
Frame related
LCD

 Screen Faceplate Frame by MorikoStyles

 Bambu Lab P1P – SD Card Display Bezel by stevensaero

Cable Chain

 Drag Chain Frame Adapter by ktothestank

 Bambu Lab P1P Cable Drag Chain Assembly by Brody

PFTE Tube

 PTFE passthrough by andrew brady

 Bambu Lab P1P ptfe tube bracket by thrutheframe

 Bambu Lab P1P cable chain bracket for stock chain by thrutheframe

 X1 / P1P PTFE Tube Guide to fix loading issues by Adam L

 PTFE Guide Extruder Bambu X1 Carbon no collision by Gremei

 Bambu Lab Y-Splitter with PC4-M10 pneumatic connector and magnets  by LayersFarm

Camera

 WYZE v2 - P1P Camera Mount by asquared

 USB Cable Management Plate by 3DSourcerer

Fan

 Bambu X1 X1C P1P Fan Duct by Renba

 Chamber Fan Duct for Bambu Lab P1P by suit


Spool Holder

 Bambu Lab P1P Side Mounted Spool Holder by sonnyc

 Bambu X1 P1P Carbon Top Filament Holder by CdRsKuLL

 Bambu Lab Spool Roller by thrutheframe

Nozzle Wiper

 Bambu Lab Nozzle Wiper by Taer.Holmes

 Bambu x1 D3vil wipe by D3vil.Design

others

 Screw hole baffle by AdrianGarside

 light up the BambuLab P1P by Ulli

 Bambu Lab X1 / P1P - Silica-container by mr_clean

 Bambu Lab X1C P1P Filapoop scoop base insert, Plastic ramp for debris removal by GuyH

 Hotend plug removal tool for Bambu Labs X1 printer by mrfixit

Enclosure
Open

 P1P Modplate Customization by Bambu Lab

 Companion Cube P1P Mod by neil3dprints

 Bambulab P1P Super Mario block Enclosure Mod - Carcasa by Control 3D

 P1P Enclosed Sides: Pegboard Modplate by Hobo4ssassin

 Bambu P1P Pixel case mod by Jason Skidmore

Closed

 Anti-Sound P1P Enclosure by Jumbify

 P1P Modplate Customization by Bambu Lab Wiki


 Bambu Lab P1P full printable enclosure mod (P1X) by Taer.Holmes

 Bambu Lab P1P "Minimal" Enclosure + Door by suit

 ARC for Bambu Lab P1P by thrutheframe

o Bambu P1P top lid riser for ARC P1P outer shell by remington

 EasyARC for Bambu Lab P1P - Easy Print Version by ap.engineering

 Bambu Lab P1P - "Vision" Enclosure by humebeam

 P1P Door Hinge+Handle for cheap DIY Enclosure by Fabian N

 Borg Cube P1P Mod by neil3dprints

Top Enclosure

 Bambu P1P and X1 Sliding Vent Glass Top Enclosure /w LED option by ktothestank

 Lid Spacer by Pretzel 3D

 BambuLab Top Glass Riser 4 COB LED Remix with LED Shield by dkarjadi

X1 Glass Door

 P1P front plastic cover rebuild for glass door and glass top lid by Goliad The Dark

 Bambu Lab P1P cover for glass door by Exciting7855

Poop Chute / Waste Bin


 Filament waste bin by bruceval

 Bambu Poop Chute by Hobo4ssassin

 Bambu Long Drop Poop Chute by EvilSpyBoy

 Magnetic Poop Chute by nilson_fx

Calibration
 Scan Tower : Calibrate a Filament's Fan & Temperature Settings  by Adam L

 Bambu Lab X1C / P1P Flushing Volume Calibration by gartnix


Build Plate
 Bambu build plate holder by ag_atlpe

 Wall mountable build plate holder for Bambu or any other similarly size plates  by AdrianGarside

Slicer
Software
Bambu Studio

 Download

 Changelog on Github

Videos/Guides

 An In-Depth Look at Bambu Studio Slicer by The 3D Print General

Orca Slicer (ex. SoftFever)


A modified/enhanced version of Bambu Studio

 Repository on Github

 Download on Github

 Changelog on Github

Videos/Guides

 Bambu Studio SoftFever fork: An advanced slicer for many 3D printers  by Teaching Tech

Profiles
 Bambu Studio settings tuned for eSUN PLA+ by Portzal3D

 Filamentprofile für den Bambu Lab P1P by Das Filament

Firmware
 Changelog by Bambu Lab Wiki

G-Code
 Fast Start GCode + Improved Quick Bed Leveling - End Retract Back to AMS  by Nairod

 Bambu Lab Modified Start and End gcode by thrutheframe

Communities
 Bambu Lab P1P on Bambu Lab Community Forum

 r/BambuLab on Reddit

 Bambu Lab Official on Discord

 Bambu Labs X1/X1C/P1P Owners Group on printables.com

 Bambu Lab Official User Group on Facebook

Where to buy
 Bambu Lab Store

Creality
3 languages
 Article
 Talk
 Read
 Edit
 View history
Tools










From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shenzhen Creality 3D Technology Co, Ltd.

Native name 深圳市创想三维科技股份有限公司

Industry 3D printing

Founded 2014

Founders Chen Chun, Ao Danjun, Liu Huilin, Tang Jingke

Headquarters Shenzhen

Website www.creality.com

Creality (simplified Chinese: 创想三维; traditional Chinese: 創想三


維; pinyin: Chuàngxiǎng sānwéi), officially known as Shenzhen Creality 3D
Technology Co, Ltd., is a Chinese 3D printer manufacturing company established in
2014,[1][2] with headquarters located in Shenzhen.[3][4]
Creality was jointly launched by Chen Chun, Ao Danjun, Liu Huilin, and Tang Jingke.
[5]
 Its main products are consumer-grade 3D printers and industrial-grade 3D printers. [6]

History[edit]
In January 2020, Creality launched their 3D printing platform Creality Cloud.[7]
In April 2021, the company launched an entry-level 2K monochrome resin 3D printer.[8]
In March 2022, Creality was sued by Artec for allegedly plagiarizing Artec Studio's
software code.[9] The case was filed in the New York Eastern District Court on March 25
and is still pending.[10]

Controversy[edit]
Creality has a history of GPL violations around the Marlin firmware and other GPL
software. The first documented case is from 2018,[11] and Creality continued this
behavior until at least 2022.[12]

External links[edit]
 Official website

References[edit]
1. ^ Colin Dow (30 March 2022).  Simplifying 3D Printing with OpenSCAD: Design, build, and
test OpenSCAD programs to bring your ideas to life using 3D printers. Packt.
pp.  4–. ISBN 978-1-80181-179-8.
2. ^ Wakefield, Edward (2022-04-05).  "Creality celebrates its 8th anniversary". 3D Printing
Media Network - The Pulse of the AM Industry. Retrieved 2022-12-06.
3. ^ Jeff Green. "America's Garage Hobbyists Fight the Pandemic With 3D Printers". Bloomberg
News. April 22, 2020.  Archived  from the original on May 27, 2022.
4. ^ CREALITY 3D. "Creality Made its Debut at CIIE 2022, Introducing 3d Printing Technology
to Facilitate China-Brazil Trade and Communications".  www.prnewswire.com.
Retrieved 2022-12-06.
5. ^ "The 8th anniversary of Creality was officially launched in Shenzhen".  China Internet
Information Center. April 12, 2022. Archived from the original on 2022-05-27.
6. ^ "Shenzhen manufacturing industry resumed work in an orderly manner". People's Daily.
Feb 18, 2020. Archived from the original on 2022-05-27.
7. ^ "Creality Cloud: A New Site for Freelance 3D Designers or Artists (Ad)". All3DP. 2022-08-
11. Retrieved  2022-12-05.
8. ^ Bush, Steve (April 26, 2021). "Creality adds a lower-cost resin printer to its
range". Electronics Weekly.
9. ^ Denise Bertacchi (April 8, 2022). "Artec Sues Creality For Allegedly Copying 3D Scanner
Software, Wants Kickstarter to Withhold Funds From Campaign".  Tom's
Hardware. Archived from the original on 2022-08-11.
10. ^ "Artec Europe S.A.R.L. v. Shenzhen Creality 3D Technology Co., LTD. et al (1:22-cv-
01676)".  Law.com. March 25, 2022. Archived from the original  on May 27, 2022.
11. ^ "GPL Violations Cost Creality A US Distributor".  Hackaday. 27 August 2018.
12. ^ "3D Printer GPL Violation List".  TH3D Studio LLC. Retrieved 31 January  2023.

Categories: 
 Companies established in 2014
 3D printer companies
 Companies based in Shenzhen
 Chinese brands
The Prusa i3 is a family of fused deposition modeling 3D printers, manufactured by Czech company
Prusa Research under the trademarked name Original Prusa i3. Part of the RepRap project, Prusa
i3 printers were called the most used 3D printer in the world in 2016. [1] The first Prusa i3 was
designed by Josef Průša in 2012, and was released as a commercial kit product in 2015. The latest
model (Prusa MK4 on sale as of March 2023) is available in both kit and factory assembled versions.
The Prusa i3's comparable low cost and ease of construction and modification made it popular in
education and with hobbyists and professionals, with the Prusa i3 model MK2 printer
receiving several awards in 2016.[2]
The i3 series is released under an open source license, so many other companies and individuals
have made variants of the printer.

Models[edit]

Prusa Mendel
 

Prusa Mendel (iteration 2)


 

Prusa i3
 

Prusa i3 MK2
RepRap Mendel[edit]
First conceived in 2009, RepRap Mendel 3D printers were designed to be assembled from 3D
printed parts and commonly available off-the-shelf components (referred to as "vitamins," as they
cannot be produced by the printer itself).[3][4] These parts include threaded rods, leadscrews, smooth
rods and bearings, screws, nuts, stepper motors, control circuit boards, and a "hot end" to melt and
place thermoplastic materials.[5] A Cartesian mechanism with a movable flat bed and tool motion on
two horizontal and two vertical rods permit placement of material anywhere in a cubic volume; this
design has continued throughout development of the i3 series.
Prusa Mendel[edit]
Josef Průša, a core developer of the RepRap project who had previously developed a PCB heated
"bed" on which parts are printed, adapted and simplified the RepRap Mendel design, reducing the
time to print 3D plastic parts from 20 to 10 hours, and including 3D printed bushings in place of
regular bearings.[6][7] First announced in September 2010, the printer was dubbed Prusa Mendel by
Průša himself.[8] According to the RepRap wiki, "Prusa Mendel is the Ford Model T of 3D printers." [9][10]
Prusa Mendel (Iteration 2)[edit]
Průša streamlined his Mendel design, releasing "Prusa Iteration 2" in November 2011. Parts
changes allowed for snap-fit assembly (no glue required); fewer tools were needed to construct and
maintain this version. Although not required, fine-pitch manufactured pulleys and LM8UU linear
bearings were recommended over printed equivalents for "professional" results. [11][12]
Prusa i3[edit]
In May 2012, Průša released a major redesign, focused on ease of construction and use, and no
longer structured around the simplest available common hardware as previous RepRap printers
were.[13] The Prusa i3 design replaced the threaded-rod, triangular Z axis frame construction with a
rigid, single-piece water jet cut aluminium vertical frame to improve printing speed and accuracy;
M10 threaded rods were still used in the base. It used a single piece, food safe stainless steel hot
end called the Prusa Nozzle which printed with 3 mm filament, and used M5 threaded rods as lead
screws instead of M8.[14][15][16][17][18]
In 2015, Průša released an i3 full kit under the brand name "Original Prusa i3". [1] For about three
months, the Prusa i3 was delivered set up for a proprietary 3 mm filament diameter (which
retrospectively has been dubbed the "mark zero"), before the Mk1 update when it was switched to
the more common filament diameter of 1.75 mm.[19]
Prusa i3 MK2 and MK2S[edit]
Průša released the Prusa i3 MK2 in May 2016. It was the first hobby 3D printer with mesh bed
leveling and automatic geometry skew correction for all three axes. Features included a larger build
volume, custom stepper motors with integrated lead screws, a non-contact inductive sensor for auto-
leveling, and a rewritten version of the Marlin firmware.[20][21][22] Other new features include
a polyetherimide print surface, Rambo controller board and an E3D V6 Full hotend. [23][24] The Prusa
MK2 became the first RepRap printer to be supported by Windows 10 Plug-and-Play USB ID.[25]
In March 2017, Průša announced on his blog that the revised Prusa i3 MK2S would ship in place of
the Prusa i3 MK2.[26] Enhancements cited include U-bolts to hold the LM8UU bearings where cable
ties had been used, higher quality bearings and rods, an improved mount for the inductance sensor,
improved cable management, and a new electronics cover. An upgrade kit was offered to owners of
the MK2 to add these improvements.
Prusa i3 MK3 and MK2.5[edit]
In September 2017, Prusa i3 MK3 was released, marketed as "bloody smart." [27] Starting with this
model, the base and Y axis were assembled with aluminum extrusion, eliminating the last of the
structural threaded rods from the Mendel design. Included were a new extruder with dual Bondtech
drive-gears, quieter fans with RPM monitoring, faster print speeds, an updated bed leveling sensor,
a new electronics board named "Einsy", quieter stepper motors with 128 step microstepping drivers
and a magnetic heatbed with interchangeable PEI-coated steel sheets.[28] Electrical components
were updated to work with the new 24 volt power supply. The printer also offers dedicated sockets to
connect Raspberry Pi Zero W running a fork of the open source OctoPrint software for wireless
printing.
Ease-of-use features included a filament detector, allowing the printer to load filament when it is
inserted, and to pause printing if the filament is jammed or runs out; error-correcting stepper motor
drivers preventing layer shifts due to skipped steps; and recovery after power outages. The ambient
temperature sensor both confirms suitable environment temperature and detects overheated
electrical connections on the main board.
Existing MK2 and MK2S users were offered a $199 partial upgrade named MK2.5, limited to
features which are cheaper to upgrade. [29] After negative feedback from the community, Prusa made
available a more expensive $500 MK2S to MK3 full upgrade. [27][30]
Prusa i3 MK3S and MK3S+[edit]
In February 2019, Prusa i3 MK3S was released, along with the Multi Material Upgrade 2S (MMU2S),
which allows selecting any of 5 different materials for printing together automatically. [31] MK3S
changes include a simplified opto-mechanical filament sensor, improved print cooling, and easier
access to service the extruder. [32]
Prusa made a running change starting November, 2020 to the Prusa i3 MK3S+. [33] This model has a
revised bed leveling sensor and minor parts changes.
Prusa i3 MK4[edit]
In March, 2023 Prusa announced the i3 MK4 and the Multi Material Unit version 3. [34] This model
features a new i3 version of their "Nextruder" extruder system first seen on the Prusa XL, no-
adjustment load cell bed leveling, a modular replaceable all-metal hot end, a color touchscreen, and
a die-cast[35] aluminum frame and extruder frame.[36] The 32-bit main processor board includes
additional safety and monitoring circuits, a network connector, and a Wi-fi module. This is Prusa's
first Mendel-based design to include support for local and cloud monitoring and support.
Switching to 0.9 degree stepping motors, and the addition of input shaping and pressure advance,
allow the Mendel-style design to print faster while avoiding ringing artifacts and other undesirable
patterns imposed on the object being made, even though it does not have the advantages of the
box-like structure of CoreXY printers.[37] However, Průša has stated that print quality, not maximum
speed, is their design goal. There is a provision for an accelerometer, often used in 3D printing for
self-tuning of input shaping, but that component is not included in the final design.
When announced, software for input shaping, touch screen operation, and sensor data collection
were not finished, and the Multi Material Unit was not ready for release. Upgrade kits for earlier
models likewise were not available for shipping.

Other Prusa models[edit]


Following the MK3S, Prusa introduced two unrelated models, the Prusa Mini (with a cantilever arm)
and Prusa XL (using a Core XY method inside a full-frame structure). These printers are not
iterations of the Mendel frame design.

Recognition[edit]
 In 2012, Josef Průša received honors from the governor of the Vysočina Region in
the Czech Republic for his accomplishments in technology.[38]
 In February 2014 he was featured on the cover of Czech Forbes magazine as one of the
30 under 30 list.[39]
 The MK2 and MK2S printers both won Best Overall 3D Printer awards from Make:
Magazine.[40]
 Deloitte placed Prusa Research at the top of the 2018 Deloitte Technology Fast 50 as
the fastest growing company in Central Europe.[41][42]
 The 3D Hubs Q3 2018 Trends report noted that the Prusa i3 MK2, MK2S and MK3 had
been used to manufacture nearly 35% of all prints ordered through their fee-for-service
business.[43]
 The MK3 was named FFF 3D printer of the year for 2019 by 3D Printing Industry.[44]
 Průša was again featured on the cover of the Czech edition of Forbes in 2019 for his
leadership at the now billion-koruna company.[45]
 All3DP named the MK3 Best 3D Printer of 2018, and the MK3S Best 3D Printer of 2020.
[46][47]

Components and materials[edit]

Josef Průša inside an early Prusa i3 MK2 print farm producing 3D printed parts at Prusa Research in Prague,
Czech Republic.

All Prusa i3 models use 3D printing filament as feedstock to make parts.


Like other RepRap printers the Prusa i3 is capable of creating many of its own parts. Formerly these
were printed in ABS plastic; Prusa Research now uses mostly PETG instead.[48] Prusa Research
maintains a "print farm" of 600 3D printers (as of October 2021) to manufacture plastic parts for
Original Prusa branded products.[49][50]
Like most FDM 3D printers,[51][52] the Prusa i3 uses a nozzle with standard M6-threads.[citation needed]

Metal frame and constructed X axis, printed parts in yellow.


 

Assembled Y axis, printed parts in yellow.


 

Prusa i3 extruder and hot end with yellow printed parts.


 

Completed Prusa i3, printed parts in yellow.


Prusament[edit]
In 2020, Prusa launched their own line of materials called Prusament, which are designed to be
extremely consistent. Prusament materials come with a QR code which allows customers to view the
exact specifications and test results from their spool. [53]
First layer control and bed leveling[edit]
When extruding the first layer, the print head must be a precise distance away from the build plate
for proper adhesion. Many 3D printers rely on the user to complete this process by adjusting the
height of the bed at several locations ("bed leveling"). To automate this process, most Prusa i3
model have a sensor to detect height of the printbed at different locations, and then adjust for it
when printing ("auto-leveling").[54]

 PINDA V1 - An non-contact inductive sensor used on MK2/S and MINI.


 PINDA V2 - A thermally compensated inductive sensor used on MK2.5, MK2.5S, MK3,
and MK3S.
 SuperPINDA - A thermally insensitive sensor used with MK2.5/S, and MK3/S/+. [55]
 Load cell sensor - A contact sensor used on the MK4.
The PINDA series requires an electronic Z-height adjustment which may vary for different heat bed
surfaces or different nozzles. The load cell sensor automatically compensates for variations in
nozzle size, and thickness and expansion of the heated bed surface, eliminating stored settings for
the purpose.

Variants[edit]
With all aspects of the design freely available under open source and open hardware terms,
companies and individuals around the world have produced Prusa i3 copies, variants, and upgrades
in assembled and kit form, with thousands offered for sale as early as 2015. [56][57][58] Rather than
compete directly with these, Prusa Research's strategy is to pursue continual refinement of its
designs.[59]
Frames[edit]
The distinguishing feature of the i3 from its predecessors is the vertical frame, which can take many
forms. These include single sheet frames cut from steel or acrylic, box frames
from plywood or medium-density fibreboard, and Lego.[60][61][62][63] Inexpensive aluminum extrusion is
commonly used, both by printer enthusiasts and by manufacturers of "clone" i3 printers. [64][65] Some
mass market i3 variants, such as many Shenzhen Creality products, use rollers against the extruded
frame itself instead of precision rods and bearings to reduce cost and complexity.

A Prusa i3 with a standard metal frame.


 

A Prusa Xi3 with an acrylic frame.


 

A Prusa i3 with a plywood box frame.


 


A Prusa i3 with a melamine-resin particle board frame.
Extruders[edit]
Beyond the standard Prusa i3 filament extruders, others have created aftermarket extruders and
enthusiast tool heads, including a MIG welder and a laser cutter.[66][67][68] Průša offered a collection of
functional cooking tools and programs under the name "MK3 Master Chef Upgrade" as an April
Fools' Day gag in 2018.[69]

A partially printed single-colour object showing the infill created to increase rigidity and reduce
the amount of plastic used.
 

A 3DBenchy created on a Prusa i3 using a color-mixing hot end.

See also[edit]
 Prusa MINI
 Prusa XL

References[edit]
1. ^ Jump up to:a b "What's up with Original Prusa i3? – Prusa Printers".  Prusa Printers. March 2,
2016. Retrieved  June 13,  2016.
2. ^ Ertischek, David (February 3, 2016).  "Prusa I3 is a DIY 3D printer you can actually
afford". Boy Genius Report. Retrieved  June 12,  2016.
3. ^ "Mendel - RepRap". reprap.org. Retrieved  January 12,  2021.
4. ^ "Distributing 3DP Parts — and Vitamins — With Passion". 3D Printing Industry. August 12,
2013. Retrieved  June 15,  2016.
5. ^ "Hot End Design Theory - RepRap". reprap.org. Retrieved  January 12,  2021.
6. ^ Thingiverse.com. "PCB heated print bed by josefprusa".  www.thingiverse.com.
Retrieved June 19, 2016.
7. ^ "first commit · josefprusa/PrusaMendel@6ed4480".  GitHub. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
8. ^ {https://www.reprap.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Prusa_Mendel&oldid=19530}
9. ^ Prusa, Josef (October 4, 2010). "RepRap: Blog: Story of simpler Mendel: PLA bushings and
X-axis". Retrieved  May 18, 2021.
10. ^ User "Scwimbush"; User "Prusajr" (April 12, 2011).  "Prusa Mendel - RepRap". reprap.org.
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External links[edit]
 Prusa Research
Categories: 
 Open hardware electronic devices
 3D printing
 RepRap project
 3D printer companies
 Czech brands

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