Lego is notorious for dimensional tolerance, most 3d printer, fdm type, at the budget end will really struggle to make studs that work. Resin maybe but not really familiar with them.
If your on a budget buy the smallest build plate that does what you need it to do. Bigger on cheaper machines = more room for error.
I have an older ender 3, has enough mods to make it useful (repeatable results and decent speed) . Stock it would work, but drive you insane with issues
Thanks, this bit did sorry me slightly with the Lego stands. I guess that is why the main aspect of the stand doesn’t rely on the studs. I’m not that worried about the studs for the mini figures to stand on, as that is very much secondary purpose.
If you really want the Lego studs to work, you could always epoxy some genuine bricks to the printed stand. Many of the dimension / tolerance issues arise from the slight interference fit necessary for removable parts - it looks as though this would only be required where the figures fit the stand?
Lego is notorious for dimensional tolerance, most 3d printer, fdm type, at the budget end will really struggle to make studs that work. Resin maybe but not really familiar with them.
If your on a budget buy the smallest build plate that does what you need it to do. Bigger on cheaper machines = more room for error.
I have an older ender 3, has enough mods to make it useful (repeatable results and decent speed) . Stock it would work, but drive you insane with issues