9 out of 10 is a perfectly reasonable expectation, assuming you're not including design tweaks (for printability). Once you've tuned/tweaked your bot, you should be fine. But please resist the urge to yell foul in the first few weeks. You said that you don't mind tinkering a little - you will certainly need to do that in the early days of ownership.
I cannot speak to the multiple fabrication issues, as my only problem was a warped acrylic plate (they replaced it immediately, for free). I did have one other problem, which was a worn out plunger after a few hundred hours. But they also replaced it for free. Neither of these issues halted my printing.
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On Thursday, January 31, 2013 9:38:32 PM UTC-5, ddurant wrote:He'd have had few problems and a bunch more money left over if he'd bought an Ultimaker or MakerGear M2.
As one who is considering purchasing the Rep2X, what other machines do people think are worth considering and why?I spent a good deal of time reading Make magazine's 3D printer shootout and clear winners for size, reliability, and quality are a bit ambiguous.
Fyi, at the most i stick a silicon pack in a gallon Ziplock with abs. Usually i keep a couple just open and i have never had any serious issues in 3+ years. To me moisture issues are a myth. In fact a bathroom vent from a room with a shower vents right into my garage above my bot. It greatly reduces any static electricity because of the humidity and heat.