-
-
The following guide is valid only for the Einsy-case with the removable back part. See the picture.
-
-
-
Carefully cut all the indicated plastic parts and remove the cut-out part. During cutting the case, MAKE SURE you WON'T CUT the Einsy board!!!
-
-
-
Clean the surroundings for any remaining sharp plastic parts.
-
Insert the Raspberry Pi Zero W, don't forget to add the spacing frame and the MicroSD card ;)
-
Use the cover to create a protection for the RPi Zero W.
-
-
-
Plug the printer and turn it on.
-
Go to the Settings menu and turn ON the RPi port. Return to the printer's home screen.
-
Now, wait for a few minutes. The RPi isn't a superfast computer and it needs time to boot. Then open the browser and try opening a website: octopi.local
-
If octopi.local doesn't work, please use the following steps:
-
Check your router for new IP address or wait until the address is displayed on the printer's screen.
-
As soon as you have the IP, open browser on your PC and insert it. If the PrusaPrint webpage loads, you can continue.
-
Set up the PrusaPrint and start printing! We are done, enjoy your printer ;)
-
-
-
OctoPrint provided by Prusa Research is tested and is confirmed to be booting correctly. If you can't access the web interface, check the following:
-
Is the RPi port enabled on your printer?
-
Did you enter correct Wi-Fi name (SSID) and password?
-
Is the RPi Zero W correctly plugged in the EINSY RAMBo board?
-
Are you connected to the same Wi-Fi network?
-
In case all hints above didn't help, please visit our forums.
-
Cancel: I did not complete this guide.
98 other people completed this guide.
3 Comments
We need a Prusa MK3S Profile - actually a profile for octoprint for every prusa. Or at least the standard values so we can enter them in octoprint.
Hi David, some parametres can be found here: https://github.com/prusa3d/OctoPi I will talk to the devs, whether we can create custom profiles for each printer.
Hello,
Indeed, we would need profiles for MK3S MMU2S :-)
THanks for the tuto, worked perfectly.