The Prusa "fully assembled" XL printer is not quite fully assembled.
They should say "almost fully assembled".
I went through the final assembly steps after watching a guy do it on ytube in 10 minutes.
It took me about 30 minutes, but I went slowly, so as not to damage anything.
Plugging in the screen was a little tricky.
The plug has to align exactly with the slots on either end, and the plug only goes in one way.
If you press the plug in without it being exactly in the slots and in the right orientation, you may damage the plug and socket.
Use caution.
The other plug was a connection from the print head cord to the socket in the frame, and again this plug has to be in the correct orientation, and feels a bit delicate, but not as delicate as the screen plug.
The screen has to be screwed to the base of the machine using two screws, with a ground wire attached, and the cord plugged in.
The WIFI antenna has to be screwed in.
The print head has to be screwed to its holder on the arms with four screws, after removing the cover.
Replace the cover when done.
The tube guide is screwed into the back of the machine at hole #3, and the tube is plugged in.
The filament holder is attached to the side of the machine with one screw.
There are very good Prusa directions for all of this, with color coded arrows pointing to each piece in each step.
https://help.prusa3d.com/guide/1-introduction_402339
Plug in the power cord and power up the machine.
It goes through various tests.
Finally select "load filament" and follow the directions.
My initial filament load did not work because I did not feed the filament in by hand with it asked me to.
I unloaded the filament, and then loaded it again, and assisted feeding in the filament until the mechanism engaged the filament.
I am printing one of the test items that comes on the Prusa flash drive.
I think it is a dog or something.
I will probably just print a few layers to make sure everything is working ok.
JasonB is working on a flywheel half 3D pattern, so that is what I propose to use for a first full print, assuming I remember how to use the Slicer.
I will download the lastest Prusa Slicer.
Edit:
The good part about the machine not being completely assembled is that it gives you some familiarity with some simple assembly/disassembly sets that may be very useful in the future.
I have heard several folks say the "partially assembled" XL may be a bit tedious to assemble, which is why I ordered the "fully-assembled/almost fully assembled" unit.
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