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BG211291501 Thankyou for this one. I had little issue with power switch (had extra pair of cables with connector, so i just glued it in switch thinking that there must be a relay on the board or something). Now, with yet another "i should've known" in archives, the thing works. Not a miracle in hifi-area, but i got this for the wife, so she can wrestle with her yoga mat while online (yes, they have online yoga these days).

BG382236111 26/03/2021
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BG211291501 02/02/2022
Well well I wish there was an option for giving 4 and a half stars. I'll return to that later. X5SA Pro gives you a lot for the money. Easy to build (for someone, who has normal mechanical skills of an adult male) and good enough quality in parts. There are no flaws in design in need of immediate fixing. ...which brings me to... There are several tubers, who have given quite odd statements of this printer. Some of them may've been made of older versions, but some appear to be clear misunderstandings and fails to build the printer correctly. For example there is nothing missing in plates which have belt wheels in them. Understanding difference between attaching point and guide hole/bolt helps a lot. Also it is impossible to istall the x axis rail the way it could somehow move and lose angle. That, if you do it right of course. But as in all diy kits, there are lots of ways to make things wrong (and blame the kit afterwards). After building, i trimmed bed with calipers, helped the first aluto leveling with using folded paper to manually find z-point, then auto leveled and did a test print. That was 20mm test cube. Result was quite impressing for the first print. Cube had 0.12 - 0,06mm errors. Haven't bothered to fix that at all. One just does not need such accuracy with PLA. At least i don't. My kit had one little issue, while building. The hot end wasn't straight (maybe someone in assembly line was new in his/her job?), so i had to fix that a bit. Luckily screw holes vere large enough to correct that. That was all. But the heat bed's surface. That's the half a star missing. If you have gotten familiar of older generation 3D printers and used glass beds, you know that getting your print to stick may be difficult. In this one getting your print loose in one piece is. I managed to ruin the surface before i figured out ho to deal with it. So don't heat it at all with small items. And gently hammer the tool under your print, if you need to use heat.
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