♫musicjinni

Klipper firmware BIQU Hurakan 3D Printer, speed test, Input shaper & pressure advance tuning 180mm/s

video thumbnail
00:00 Intro
02:25 Unboxing & Assembly
04:19 Test print: 3D Benchy at standard 60mm/s
04:44 Setup Cura, enable WiFi printing
06:44 Speed test and input shaper calibrating, 3D Benchy at 180mm/s, 120mm/s, 100mm/s and 60mm/s
09:52 Pressure advance calibrating
11:22 More test prints: PLA/PETG/ABS/TPU
15:25 Compare with Ender-3 S1
16:05 Pros and Cons
19:30 Conclusions

Welcome back to Aurora tech Channel. Today, I will be reviewing the BIQU Hurakan, which is a printer from BigTreeTech with pre-installed Klipper firmware. There aren’t very many printers in the market that run Klipper firmware. I have reviewed two printers with Klipper firmware that can print really fast, or up to 400mm/s, which are the BambuLab X1 Carbon and the FLSUN V400, and though I am happy with both of them, they are not cheap. The FLSUN V400 is a Delta kinematic printer that costs around $850, and the BambuLab X1 is a CoreXY, with its base model starting at $1000.

This BIQU Hurakan only costs $369, which is much cheaper. This printer is a Cartesian bed slinger with some basic hardware that allows you to start using Klipper firmware right out of the box. The hardware cannot compare to printers in the thousand-dollar range, but let’s take a look at what it comes with.

The major feature of this printer is the BigTreeTech Manta M4P motherboard with the CB1 as a Raspberry PI replacement to run Klipper firmware. The M4P motherboard looks slightly different from the retail version, but they look like the same board just with different colors. It also comes with 4 detachable TMC2209 stepper drivers.

It has some features that are similar to an entry-level printer, including a single Z-axis and a Bowden setup. There are also some mid-range printer features, such as a dual gear metal extruder, a dual part cooling fan, a double-sided PEI textured spring steel print surface, a BIQU auto bed leveling sensor, a filament sensor, belt tensioners on both the X and Y-axis, a LED light on the print head, and there is a switch on the heated bed that allows you to only heat the center, which means you can save electricity for smaller prints and also heat up the entire bed for larger prints.

The printer comes with a tiny LCD screen. We will use the web interface to control the printer most of the time, but you can still use the screen to do basic operations like homing, preheating, bed leveling, and starting a print from the SD card.

I would like to thank BIQU for sending me this machine to review, and with that, let’s get started.


Affiliate links:

BIQU Hurakan 3D Printer $369:
https://bit.ly/biqu-hurakan




Filaments:

Eryone filament (PLA, PETG, ABS, ASA, TPU as low as $10 per roll, min 10 rolls):
https://auroratechchannel.com/links/eryone

$16.99 VOXELPLA Pro:
https://bit.ly/3UhJpYS

QIDI PA12-CF Nylon Carbon Fiber filament (1kg) $99
https://amzn.to/3cPiEK6



3D Models:

Shelf brackets:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2826947

TITANIC:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2726992

Fidget Spinner:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2237509

Chrysler Building:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:151408

Jiji Cat:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4247881

BTC Cat:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4194024

Klipper firmware BIQU Hurakan 3D Printer, speed test, Input shaper & pressure advance tuning 180mm/s

Disclaimer DMCA