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Bambu Lab H2S

Bambu Lab H2S

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No major lifecycle, firmware, availability, or support warnings detected.

Signals last verified: 17 July 2026

Signals: Lifecycle · Firmware · Support · Spare parts. What we track

Where to buy

Specifications

Build volume
340x320x340 mm
Build size class
Large - Carry-on Suitcase
Price
Base: €1,149 · Combo: €1,399
Enclosure
Full enclosure
Chamber control
Active Controlled
Materials
PLA · PETG · PHA · PVB · ABS · ASA · HIPS · PA (Nylon) · PC · PP · PPS · TPU · TPE · TPC · PEBA
Support materials
Bowden extruder
Max hotend temp
350°C
Max bed temp
120°C
Max chamber temp
65°C
Nozzle material
Hardened Steel
Hardened nozzle
Included: CF/GF abrasive variants · PLA metal fills · ABS-CF/GF · ASA-CF/GF · PA-CF/GF · PC-CF · PP-CF
Nozzle count
1
Max filament inputs
24
True multi-material
Tool change
Single Nozzle Purge Based

Ownership

Experience level
Intermediate
Assembly
Minimal
Auto bed leveling
Automatic
Auto Z offset
Yes
Auto first layer
Yes
Filament runout sensor
Yes
Spaghetti detection
Yes
Error guidance
QR Direct
Warranty
24 months
Warranty extension
Yes optionally · extends warranty length
Spare parts
Comprehensive
Firmware version
01.02.00.00

Real-world performance

Who this is for

If you're upgrading to reach engineering materials and want a machine that's already proven rather than freshly launched, this is a straightforward buy at around its price. Reviewers rate it fast, reliable, premium in build, and strong value, and the automation makes it approachable enough that even a newer user should get clean first prints, since the complexity here lives in the materials, not the daily operation. First-timers should be honest about whether they'll use the full envelope soon, because most of what you're paying for is engineering-material capability. There's one ceiling to be clear about. The multi-color system is a single nozzle doing purge-based swaps, so it's slow, wastes filament, and carries cross-contamination risk that rules out reliable mixed-material printing; treat it as multi-color, not multi-material. Plan for the noise and the mandatory ventilation, and for engineering-material work at home this is a confident buy.

PrintSignals Review

Bambu Lab H2S Review

Written by AI from manufacturer specifications and the aggregated consensus of

PrintSignals does not test printers hands-on. How we do this

Assessment

The H2S is Bambu Lab's enclosed, actively heated-chamber machine built around engineering-class materials, with single-nozzle multi-color offered as an option rather than the headline. It's aimed at someone who has printed for a while and now wants ABS, nylon, and carbon-fiber-filled filaments without stepping up to industrial gear. If your main worry is buying just before a successor lands, the signals are calm. The machine is well into its run with no replacement on the horizon, the firmware is current, and Bambu has committed software support into 2030. What you actually weigh here is the closed ecosystem and the noise, not whether the hardware performs, because reviewers consistently rate it fast, reliable, and high on print quality.

Build and print volume

The build area measures 340 by 320 by 340 mm, large enough for sizeable single parts or a full plate of smaller ones. What sets it apart is the fully enclosed, actively controlled chamber, which holds up to 65°C, paired with a 350°C hotend and a 120°C bed. That combination keeps warp-prone materials like ABS and ASA stable across a big plate, which open-frame printers can't do. The trade-off of a large enclosed volume is that longer prints are exactly where adhesion and warping tend to surface, so more build space asks for more attention as parts grow, not less.

Material capability

The reliable range is broad. PLA, PETG, PHA, PVB, ABS, ASA, HIPS, nylon (PA), PC, PP, and PPS all fall within it, and reviewers rate handling across that range as good in practice. The hardened steel nozzle is standard, so abrasive and fiber-filled variants such as ABS-CF, ASA-GF, PA-CF, and PC-CF are available without a nozzle change. Supported is not the same as effortless, though. The materials that justify this machine, the CF blends, nylon, and polycarbonate, need filament drying, careful temperature control, and calibration patience, and that overhead grows with part size and tends to appear well after a trouble-free first PLA print. The direct drive extruder also handles flexibles, with TPU the most forgiving; TPE, TPC, and PEBA are supported too, but each one raises the tuning demands.

Setup and ownership

Out of the box the printer is near-fully assembled, and reviewers put first print at under 15 minutes. Automatic bed leveling, Z-offset, and first-layer calibration keep routine printing well automated regardless of experience, and when something fails, on-screen QR codes link straight to the specific fix. The printer alone runs about €1,150, and adding the multi-spool system brings it to roughly €1,400. That add-on takes the standard single filament input up to four, expandable to 24, and beyond color changes it lets the printer switch to a fresh spool automatically when one runs out, which helps on long jobs; reviewers rate it mostly reliable, with occasional jams or swap failures. Two things shape daily life with this machine. It's noticeably loud, which matters in a shared or quiet room, and it needs ventilation as a requirement rather than a nicety, since reviewers note fumes during use and rate the enclosure seal as only partial, so some escape despite the enclosed design. For slicing you're tied to Bambu Studio, because the firmware is proprietary and third-party slicers are blocked, with OrcaSlicer's Bambu Connect integration officially rejected.

Support and longevity

Support is a genuine strength. Bambu offers comprehensive official spare parts, strong warranty coverage with an extended option, and, among the brands PrintSignals tracks, the strongest pattern of publicly acknowledging hardware issues and following through with official fixes. Software support is committed through August 2030, and security patches continue two years beyond that, to 2032. The trade-off is the closed ecosystem. Proprietary firmware and blocked third-party slicers mean your workflow stays inside Bambu's tools for the life of the machine. For a prosumer weighing lock-in, the honest read is that the long support window and deep parts availability offset that risk for now, but you're committing to one company's software direction rather than keeping an open way out.

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