This was posted 10 months 26 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

Related
  • expired

Bambu Lab 3D Printer: P1S $719, P1S Combo (with AMS) $1039 Delivered @ Bambu Lab Technology via Amazon AU

980
This post contains affiliate links. OzBargain might earn commissions when you click through and make purchases. Please see this page for more information.

I believe these may be all-time low prices on these 3D printers, and appear to be cheaper than the Black Friday specials were from Bambu Lab's online store.
Ships from Amazon, Sold by Bambu Lab Technology.

Important: on the Amazon product page, make sure you tick the checkbox to apply the deal coupon, which will then apply the discount on checkout.

P1S (without AMS), $719:
https://www.amazon.com.au/gp/product/B0CHDM8VVZ

P1S Combo (with AMS), $1039:
https://www.amazon.com.au/gp/product/B0CHDS1DMC

And here is a link to the official specs page:
https://bambulab.com/en-au/p1?product=p1s

Unfortunately they don't seem to sell the high-end X1C model on their Amazon storefront, so if you want that, you'll have to order it from Bambu Lab's online store directly instead (and wait for the next sale). The X1C has integrated LIDAR for things like auto filament calibration, a much better touchscreen and processor, better camera, hardened steel gears/nozzle for abrasive filaments, and can achieve higher bed temperatures for printing specialised filaments.

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

Related Stores

Amazon AU
Amazon AU
Marketplace
Bambu Lab
Bambu Lab

closed Comments

  • +7

    Amazing deal on this printer. I got my p1s with ams a few months ago and I love it

    • Good to hear! I just ordered the P1S with AMS myself, due to be delivered on 16 January — I can't wait!

      • +1

        My P1S with AMS currently has about 600hrs on it in a few months and going strong. Love it.

      • +6

        The multi colour print capability takes 3d printing to another level. If you think resin printing is 4k res, ender clone is like 720p compared to 3k of bambulab.
        Having owned 3d printers of all sorts from back in davinci xyz days, I've never had so much fun 3d printing as I'm having with bambulab p1s with AMS. I got my printer during black friday sales and it's been printing non stop without any issues. I also have an elegoo neptune 3 printer which is just collecting dust.

        • How much power does it use?

        • 720p vs 4k lol!

          I can tell you love your Bambu and I'm sure will agree that a klipperised Ender can print at the same quality as Bambu, just slower. Unless you print with 1mm later height on Ender and .1mm on your Bambu. .2mm is .2mm, no matter what brand of printer.

          • -1

            @cherpu: At least one person with common sense here. Cheers

          • +2

            @cherpu: But a core xy is not the same as a bed slinger. Wheels vs linear bearings. My Anycubic Vyper is nowhere near as good print quality as my QIDI X-Max 3.
            Just because the steps are the same doesn't mean equal quality.
            Print some ABS or TPU and it's a whole different ballgame.

          • +1

            @cherpu: I am only comparing against the Neptune 3 Pro I have and even at .2mm layer height there is a visible quality difference. I have not used Klipper so I cannot comment on that but IMO a product that doesnt need any assembly, tweaking, learning to produce excellent print quality is a win.

          • +1

            @cherpu: If we're talking bedslingers (which is what a $200 Ender is) then the Bambu or any other CoreXY is going to result in better ABS/ASA/PC prints, because every single Y move is not going to result in massive airflow around the object encouraging warpage.

            • @rumblytangara: The enclosure is what will improve the printing with ABS/ASA/PC to prevent warping & keep constant temps

              • +1

                @impoze: That's only half of it.

                The other half is that on a bedslinger, the entire object gets dragged around, creating constant airflow around the object. I have done plenty of printing with an enclosed bedslinger- the enclosure is still sub-optimal.

                This problem does not exist with CXY. Sure, you still get cooling issues if the chamber temp is low, but you don't get constant massive wind against the object.

      • +3

        I don't have one, but if I did I could

        • print much faster with coreXY motion system

        • print high temperature materials with all metal hotend

        • print materials that warp or give off fumes with the enclosed print area

        • Actual Multi-Material printing (not just manually changing materials at a certain layer)

      • +2

        things not looking like they are 3d printed, the speed, the ease of use, the reliability, the materials..

        • Things now looking like there are 3d printed?

          What? This is a bit too much now. Fine with the rest 😃

      • +5

        Anyone who has moved past an Ender clone is probably very, very happy not to return to such an unreliable, POS 'machine' that needs a long series of upgrades and constant attention to keep working.

        But things it can do beyond multicolour (which I regard as the least important feature)

        • Filaments beyond the basic PLA and PETG because it's CoreXY and doesn't push huge amounts of moving air around the object causing it to warp
        • Print a lot faster
        • Print reliably as a Prusa

        Enders are worth it just to figure out printing and only if you enjoy fixing machines, they are a total crapshoot of a purchase.

        • +1

          would you say the bambu p1 is about the best for a 1st 3d printer under $1500?

          • +1

            @bob98: Not the OP but for someone who wants to get straight into 3D printing without an interest in extended assembly and troubleshooting its hard to go past the Bambu labs.

            The P1S won't really be beat for under $1500 given the above for an enclosed printer

            But the Bambu labs A1 and A1 mini 'slingers' seem to be really reliable as well and closer to the other entry level printers in price

            • @Sarkosity: thanks mate really appreciate the advice. i think ill be buying bambu when a similar deal appears.

            • +1

              @Sarkosity: I've had a pretty smooth experience buying a Sovol. Sure I've spent plenty of time tinkering with it as well but I certainly didn't "need" to do much with it to print some useful little things. Multicolour sounds pretty nice though lol

              (My point being there's other choices without needing to jump up to a Bambu)

              • @dufflover: I've got a Sovol SV06 (came from a Tevo tarantula) and it's great for a cheap single colour printer. Comes mostly assembled (just have to join top and bottom halves) and run a bed probe test (no need to manually level the bed, which is a massive improvement from the tevo + most ender clones, though the probe can be added to ender clones). I chucked some PETG then ABS at it as they're mostly what I print (is in an enclosure) and it handled them perfectly.
                I'll likely get a bambu p1s combo for faster printing + multi colour at some point (would have jumped on this deal but missed it), but I have wondered if it's actually worth it when I could buy 3 more SV06's cheaper.

          • +2

            @bob98: Can't say- I don't pay that much attention to new printers.

            I've owned 4 different brands, all I can say though that Creality has a well deserved reputation for making high unreliable crappy bedslingers and would not ever touch one again.

            • @rumblytangara: i was looking at the k1 aswell so thats out the question now. have you tried the adventurer 5m?

              • @bob98: I am the last person to give printer purchase advice.

                K1 seems more reliable than the Ender bedslinger models though. According to the Internets.

            • @rumblytangara: I bought a K1 as my first 3d printer and don't agree with your comment. Has been pretty much plugnplay. Very easy to use and maintain.

              • @Bruceflix: Try an Ender bedslinger, which is what that Glade guy was referring to with a comment about a $200 printer. They have a well deserved reputation for unreliability.

          • @bob98: Yes.

      • +7

        what do you actually use it for that justifies the 5x price?

        I could have summed it up more easily:

        I use it for printing, rather than constantly trying to fix a broken Ender made out of bent parts.

      • +2

        It's plug and play basically, auto bed levelling, you can print with carbon fibre, nylon, multi colour printing just to mention a few things

        • more abrasive materials like CF and Nylon will need to have the extruder gear and hotend upgraded. I have both parts for mine, but haven't got around to installing them yet.

      • +1

        I get what you mean. Having features is one thing and using it another. If people have budget and enjoy printing then why not.

        I personally only print with PLA, PETG and TPU so don't need an enclosure.

        Having said that, there a big luck factor involved with Ender n clones. My Ender 3 V2 almost killed my interest in the hobby. I got rid of it and bought an SV06 plus. It prints well but the auto-z align makes x-gantry 2mm out of sync.

        If I was to buy a printer today it will be A1.

        • -3

          People here mostly not, unfortunately. I expected it though, and the comments really supported my suspicion. Not a single example of why anyone would need it.

          While this is a good printer, I've been using a V2 clone for a few years now, and after several kgs of filament printed (PLA, ABS, TPU), I can say with certainty, it does work reliably (if you are interested in ABS, just turn on the shield feature, you don't need an enclosure in most cases). I leveled the bed once, after replacing the default 4 springs under the bed with silicone plugs, and that's it. Since then, turn it on, upload the design and start.

          Having said that, all these kgs of prints were custom-designed in Fusion360 for their custom use-case and the design process usually took longer than the actual printing. Understanding how exactly printing works and solving printing problems is just a very small part of the whole process I'm usually involved in.

          If someone wants to buy a $1.5k printer to print colourful toys downloaded from the internets, then sure, it's a great "deal". But if someone wants to prototype and print engineering pieces, they will not be held back by their printer, but their inability to understand materials, design, supports (and the lack of), flex, torque, tension, physical, chemical, and thermal requirements, and so on.

          • @glade90:

            I can say with certainty, it does work reliably (if you are interested in ABS, just turn on the shield feature, you don't need an enclosure in most cases). I leveled the bed once, after replacing the default 4 springs under the bed with silicone plugs, and that's it. Since then, turn it on, upload the design and start.

            If you think that simply clicking the "draft shield" button is enough to stop warping on a bedslinger, then you must be printing the simplest objects possible.

            This sounds like a great example of Dunning Kruger.

            • -2

              @rumblytangara: hahahahahhahahahahahhahahhahahahahahah
              hahahahahaha
              hahaha
              you seem like the true expert here, so I believe you
              hahahahahahaahahahahah
              ahahahahahahahhahaa

              • +2

                @glade90: I'm just amazed that someone who claims to know the ins and outs of various materials, who claims to be be doing prototyping, is wasting their time doing so on a slow creaky cheap hobbyist machine.

                The only guys I know who use printers for production prototyping don't waste their time trying to save a hundred bucks here an a hundred there- they use a big Stratsys. If it ever goes down, then their machine supplier takes over printing at their HQ.

                But feel free to keep congratulating yourself on being clever on your own "great deal."

                • -3

                  @rumblytangara: hahahahahaha omg this is too funny
                  ok mr greatest expert, thank you for your valued contribution hahahaahahahahah hahahahhahaa
                  now you can go back and print your colourful toy soldiers, at least you will have some admirers
                  hahahhahaahh

    • I f'ing HATE my X1C.
      TOTAL PoS..

      The first print damaged the LiDAR, and it took four weeks to receive a replacement. The installation was challenging, involving melting glue for small connectors.
      About 50% of prints fail due to various issues.
      Today, I encountered an undetected spaghetti mess, and the AMS complained about being unable to retract the filament for an empty slot. I've spent four hours attempting to resolve the issue. Out of approximately 30 prints, only one turned out flawless.

      I have 10yrs printing exp.

      My Sidewinder X1 cost 1/7th and has been ~flawless.

      **** Bambu.

  • Thanks got one, been waiting for couple of month since its black friday sale

  • +8

    I'd thoroughly recommend getting an AMS if you plan to print more than one colour. Saves a lot of hassle!

    • lol was just about to ask about this.
      Stretching the budget and wondered if it wa worthwhile upfront vs down the track a bit

      • +1

        Definitely worth it, even if you print single colours you can keep regularly used colours in the AMS and just select them when you print rather than swapping out.

        • Thanks, this is awesome, jumping on the deal bandwagon!!

        • Even if you print single colours it's worth it just for the added ease of water-soluble support filaments (eg PVA, HIPS).

  • +1

    Picked up 4 printers and Amses haha

    • +1

      All that filament testing, right 😁👍

        • +2

          pls cancel 1 or sell me one so i can get my 1st 3d printer ahaha

        • +4

          Imagine down voting a cool as shelf idea

          • might use them as plant pots and a microwave instead

          *edit relax they are going into a print farm and the prints and money they produce will go to a good cause of keeping my local unlicensed pharmacists in business

    • +3

      Give us more deals on filament XD

      • +1

        Shittament, pretty much the best prices on filaments

        • Not much left though! My fault - waited too long to order!

  • Awesome, was watching for a deal on the P1S specifically but thought I'd be waiting closer to black Friday!

  • wow, that's a nice price! I paid full price a couple of months ago and it's amazing :)

  • +4

    Crazy value. Especially with free delivery and no slightly dodgy international payment fee.

    Plus I've read Bambu customer service can be lacking at times, so Amazon protection is even better.

    Get the AMS even if you don't want to print multi colour. Being able to auto feed in filament is fantastic, and good to have the option to print supports in a different, easy to tear away, material.

  • +1

    Shame about no AMS discount, would definitely grab one or two more if the price was right. Makes life so much easier.

  • I don’t know what I would print with one

    • +2

      There has been quite a lot of times where I've come up with or stumbled across stuff that I wish I could print.
      So I bit the bullet and bought this over a cheapo one.

    • +4

      Boaty mcboatface aka benchy
      Props for the projector
      A gazillion gopro mounts, costing around $0.3 a piece
      Wardrobe hinge broke, made one in tinkercad, disbelief looks from the Mrs was worth all the weeks of disbelief about 3d printing
      Ancient navman mount broke, no replacement parts, Macguver-ed something in 3d to put it in place.
      Things online that you never knew existed but are useful
      I’m barely an amateur with an ender3 but I am happy when the printer is cooking up something while I work XD

  • +2

    Couldn't help myself; bought the A1 a few weeks ago, now this one! Much better that this is enclosed with proper storage for filament.

  • What can i do with these?

  • thanks op been researching these for the past week. better get my ass back to work to pay them off

    • +2

      How is the ass industry these days?
      Still pumping?

      • +1

        just got pumped pretty hard when this went oos while checking out

        • +2

          I feel you, trying to checkout while flying with shiiiity satellite wifi.
          Lost out also :(
          Oh well at least we can pickup the new P2 when it comes out in a few months!

  • +1

    OOS :( missed out by seconds

    • Same :(

      • Really hope they restock.

  • +1

    Was thinking to buy, did the research, then OOS …
    Probably a good thing, will wait for the next version with a cool screen like the A1

  • +22

    Woah, Black Betty

    Bambu Lab

  • Dam missed out

  • +1

    Ugh missed it, been watching for another deal since BF

  • +1

    Definitely a price error as they frequently interchange between a coupon and a discount. Never had both offers together. Great deal tho.

  • Awesome deal! I love my ps1!

  • +2

    spewing i missed this! Hope it restocks….

    • +2

      Doubt it will restock at this price.
      This price was due to them swapping to their normal "discounted" pricing before their discount code had expired. Which they had raised the pricing for all weekend.

  • crap missed it

  • I'm waiting on a part to arrive to fix my Ender for the nth time, very tempted to throw in the towel and run this hobby on easy mode

    • I'm a similar spot atm. With so many good printers coming out at the < $1k mark, I'm tossing up how many more hours I spend troubleshooting my Ender 3…

      • same, my ender 3 pro has been going strong tbh. I just suffer from major upgradtitis.
        I installed a BMG clone extruder yesterday and im very happy with how it prints now.

        • Nice great choice, I'm waiting on an extension cable replacement for the DD extruder.

  • Damn, missed out D:

  • Guess I saved myself $1039 for now…

  • Have had a P1P for a year. I would have grabbed two of these with AMS. God damn I always miss the good shit ha.

  • Damn, I should have checked ozbargain first thing after I woke up. Banger deal

    • +1

      Don't feel too bad. The deal was posted at 4am. It was sold out even by 8am when I checked.

      • I'll comfort myself by saying my N3P is sufficient and I just saved 1k……

      • Yip, exactly the time i saw the deal as well 4 hours too late
        Now I'm def not buying it until I get the same price again :P (I have 1P1P without AMS for now).

      • +1

        Well only 1AM in the west.. Unlucky for me/lucky for my wallet went to sleep earlier than I normally do and still missed it :/

    • It’s a P1P too. Honestly best to just go for carbon.

  • 1 just came back into stock discount wasnt there any more :(

    • +1

      The discount code is over so it's showing at $979.

  • +2

    https://youtu.be/Oio2ibz7rMw?si=zPUVxbX6zR-Pof7n

    Good news for those on the fence re Bambu being closed source.

    • +1

      Only relevant to the X1 printers on older firmware. Not to the P or A series.

    • +1

      Bear in mind that this does not apply to the P1 series, which this deal is for. The P1 does not run Linux and is therefore not capable of such firmware mods.

Login or Join to leave a comment