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Bambu Lab

Chinese manufacturer of 3D printers From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bambu Lab
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Bambu Lab (Chinese: 拓竹; pinyin: Tuò zhú) is a consumer tech company that designs and manufactures desktop 3D printers. The company is based in Shenzhen, China, with locations in Shanghai and Austin, Texas.[1] It was founded in 2020 by a team of engineers from DJI.[2]

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Founding

Bambu Lab was founded by four engineers led by Dr. Ye Tao. Tao was born and raised in China. Before he founded Bambu Lab, he worked at DJI as the head of DJI consumer drone department.[3]

In 2023, it was revealed that Bambu Lab is partially funded by IDG Capital,[4] a global investment firm. In 2024, IDG Capital was temporarily listed by the U.S. government before being removed later that year.

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Products

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Thumb
An A1 with an AMS lite
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An A1 mini with an AMS lite
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An X1 Carbon model with an AMS

The company manufactures 3D printers, filament, and accessories for personal, commercial, and for educational purposes.

Printers

A1 Series

  • A1 – a bedslinger desktop printer supports multi-color printing via a Bambu Labs Automatic Material System (AMS) called "AMS Lite".[5][6]
  • A1 Mini – a smaller and less expensive version of the A1, for beginners printing small objects—up to 180x180x180mm. supports AMS Lite.

P Series

  • P1S – an enclosed-chamber CoreXY printer with advanced features for professionals, amateurs, and hobbyists. It is functionally similar to the X1 printer, with some omissions or downgrades including a non-touch display, slower processor, simplified control board and no LIDAR scanner for dual-redundant automatic bed leveling and first layer detection. It supports multi-color printing via AMS.
  • P1P – a cheaper, non-enclosed version of the P1S. Bambu Lab shared files via their website for users to print their own customizable side panels.

X1 Series

  • X1 – an advanced CoreXY printer targeted at professionals with high-end features, including a built-in lidar scanner.[7] Bambu Lab's initial flagship product, it was replaced by the X1C/X1E for higher-end users (the E representing the enterprise model) and the P1S filling the role of a more budget-friendly machine. The X1 was introduced in 2022 through a Kickstarter campaign that raised over $7 million.
  • X1 Carbon (X1C) – an iteration of the X1, shipping with higher-end features such as a hardened nozzle, hardened extruder gears, and activated carbon odor filtration, and an aluminium enclosure. The "Carbon" model name alludes to its ability to print carbon-composite based materials thanks to the hardened nozzle and gears, though not all materials are compatible due to missing active chamber heating and other limitations.
  • X1E – An upgraded, enterprise-ready version of the X1C that is marketed for manufacturing and educational use, shipping with additional privacy measures for businesses such as support for fully isolated local networking, and some performance upgrades over the X1C such as a dedicated chamber heater.[2]

H2 Series

  • H2D – A dual-nozzle printer with a heated chamber and larger build plate than the X1 Series. It can also be used as a vinyl cutter or upgraded to the Laser Edition with modules and upgrade components sold separately. It was released with the AMS HT and AMS 2 Pro which both have upgraded motors and active filament dryers built-in. [8]
    • H2D Laser Edition – Includes laser module (10w or 40w depending on configuration) and a cutting module in the box, along with additional safety equipment for the laser module like emergency stop button and laser proof transparent panels.[8] The laser module and glass also come as an acessory.
  • H2S – A single-nozzle printer with a heater chamber and larger build plate than the X1 Series, making it the largest 3D printer at bambu Lab. It was announced on 26 August 2025. The H2S is a slightly stripped down version of the H2D that offers a more affordable option to people that don't need dual extruder printing capabilities.

Automatic Material System (AMS)

AMS – A system that holds 4 rolls of filament, and can switch between them during prints. It can also hold 2 dessicant packs to keep the filament dry.

AMS 2 Pro – An upgrade from the AMS that adds filament drying.

AMS Lite – AMS for the A1 and A1 mini

AMS HT – Holds only one filament, but has a screen on the front for displaying important info like tempature, and is built to hold advanced filament that cannot be held in the regular AMS like TPU.

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Software

Bambu Studio – Bambu Studio is an open-source slicing software.

Bambu Handy – Bambu Handy app is a 3D printing service platform designed to offer a seamless 3D printing experience. Users can control printers remotely, connect to the MakerWorld models library, and print designs.

Bambu Suite – Bambu Suite is a software that supports laser cutting, blade cutting and pen drawing. It is designed to integrate the whole design process into a single workflow. It supports computer-vision-based alignment.

Bambu Farm Manager – "Bambu Farm Manager" is an application suite designed for managing multiple printers. It supports real-time printing status display, batch operations, printer firmware upgade, print job queue management and multi-user management.

Criticism

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Bambu Lab's 3D printers have been criticized for their dependence on their cloud service. In August 2023, a Bambu Cloud outage caused some printers to print uncontrollably or cease functioning altogether.[9]

In 2025, a security vulnerability was discovered in the cloud connection.[10][11] Bambu Lab announced in a blog post that future firmware would be equipped with an authorization and authentication protection mechanism.[12] Users feared that basic functions, such as printing over the local area network (LAN), would require authorization via the Bambu Cloud and restrict the use of third-party slicers.[13][14][15] Bambu Lab later edited the original blog post to corroborate a newer post where they dismissed many concerns that users had, claiming they were the target of misinformation and cited their edited post as proof. However, the original unedited post, together with the terms of service, appeared to confirm or imply that these concerns were not unfounded.[16][12][independent source needed]

Some users fear that Bambu Lab intends to force them into a cloud-based subscription model. Louis Rossmann criticized Bambu Lab for restricting device functionality. He also noted that they have changed the terms of service without notice and removed evidence of the changes.[17][18]

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See also

  • Voron 2.4, a CoreXY printer with open source hardware and software

References

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