Cal Flame Gourmet G2000 to wysoce wydajny grill gazowy, który oferuje wyjątkową moc i wygodę. Posiada trzy ustawienia płomienia, które pozwalają na szybkie i łatwe przygotowywanie posiłków. Grill wyposażony jest w wytrzymałe stalowe ruszty, które łatwo utrzymać w czystości. Wyświetlacz LCD oferuje łatwy w użyciu interfejs użytkownika, który pomaga w wybieraniu odpowiednich ustawień. Grill wyposażony jest w certyfikowane butle gazowe, które zapewniają bezpieczeństwo i łatwe korzystanie z grilla. Instrukcja obsługi Cal Flame Gourmet G2000 zawiera wszystkie informacje niezbędne do prawidłowego używania grilla, w tym informacje dotyczące bezpiecznego używania urządzenia, konserwacji i czyszczenia.
Ostatnia aktualizacja: Instrukcje obsługi Cal Flame Gourmet G2000
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Instrukcje obsługi Cal Flame Gourmet G2000
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Komentarz
Have to agree, it does look like good quality machine & prints, but price is a bit much for build size & adhesion issues. Great video Joel. Honest & fair....
it'll be interesting to see how it holds up over time. if it really is built like a tank, it will justify the price...
I love that it has magnetic sides. So good for keeping drafts out...
Definitely not for the real consumer market, but good printer none the less. I find it a hard price point because it competes with Gmax and in my opinion the Gmax is far more value for the money. Interesting review item.
I've been using a granite floor tile from the local hardware depot, it has a polished finish and it works very well for the material I use, PLA, PETG, ABS/Carbon. The down side, it's heavy and takes a long time to heat up. If you remember to heat the bed as soon as you turn the printer on it doesn't add too much to the print time. The super nice property of the granite is that once the print cools, no matter the material it just lifts off, no scraping or prying, just pick the print up off the bed. I use a modified SparkLabs SparkCube XL, it's a CoreXY design with 3 stepper motors to lift the bed so the weight isn't an issue.
I guess im 4 years late to this review. Never seen this printer before and the build quality and features are amazing even for today’s standards!
The z axis seems rather short on this printer, but is probably more than adequate for a set of dentures. It may be interesting to create a chart of your printers (and any others you know the details of) where you work out the price divided by the build volume - so you end up with a cost/cubic mm for each printer. Just a silly idea from a spreadsheet fan.
Nice review. Still trying to wrap my head around all the information out there. Your reviews are incredibly helpful
Honestly, there are better printers in this price range which are targeted for the same demo. I have a Type A Machines Series 1 Pro. They are targeting the same demo. When I purchased it, they had a more consumer facing approach, they've since ratcheted up their price out what I would call high end pro-summer 3d printers and into the $4k and up commercial demo. I don't like this move, but I will say the machine -- with minor tweaks works extremely well. It's a great deal bigger than this, and that's where I think commercial machines differentiate themselves, build area. You can't price a printer in this neighborhood, and not be in the 300mm or so print area. You can't be relying on magic goop or whatever to have parts stick -- it needs to just work -- this one still requires significant knowledge. I see this in non-man's land, it's not big enough and simple enough to be a reliable commercial workhorse, but it's too expensive for a hobbyist -- how is it better than a gCreate 1.5XT+ with heated bed -- price is similar, or the Ultimaker 2+. I don't see where it fits in.
I think the printer uses ball screws for the z axis, not standard lead screws.
I'd definitely love to have one of these in my home office. But my Monoprice Mini was more in my range :P
I love this review that why I wait for your reviews impatiently, I agree with you 100% I was researching this for sometime I was turned off by the price too.
I really like the idea of the quick change hot ends.
I understand the price because of the huge manufacturing costs of Ball screws, Waterjet aluminium, and complicated (and custom!) hot end... but the conversion into AUD for me places it at $4600 bucks aud! That's basically a cubicon single with the Hepa, mechanical levelling bed and actively heated, enclosed chamber. It feels to me that it's a case of 'shove high end parts' into a 'i3 style 3D printer'. Not convinced it was a great move, but just an objective view as I haven't tried it out first hand.
it's a good Review BUT I think your problems with the heated ned where caused by the wrong temp settings. You would normally use about 110-120°C for let's say ABS bit on this type of bed you can easily go up to about 140-160°C to make the material softer so that it sticks. I think you should at least Test these settings and add your "new opinion" afterwards to give it a fair chance.
Did you use the heated bed? For ABS i need to set it to 100C (which turns out to be 60C surface temperature in my enclosed Duplicator 4), or for my unenclosed PrintrBot Simple Metal, I need to set it to 60C-80C to keep PLA from peeling off of kapton tape. Even so, the room temperature cant really be below 72F, or have any real airflow. Based on the thermal mass of the buildplate, and the psychotically high temp (180C) you can set it to, I think your sticking issues were mostly that you didn't set the build plate temperature high enough.
Dude can't wait for the raise3d review that looks like a beast !
A lot of professionals strongly believe that price=performance. For 3D printers this correlation is especially weak amd many companies seem geared to exploit/capitalise this beleif. At least this is a good machine unlike some. ahem 3D systems. This one reminds me of the Leapfrog Xeed that costs about $8K.
But it has orange acrylic sides and it's pretty. I guess the hobby to pro-sumer jumping point is, yes it prints nicer, but does it do it faster, with less maintenance, more ease of use, and 1000s of hours with out a breakdown?
I think what you mean to say, that this printer is a little better then less expensive machines for a whole lot of money.