I just use my printer for my own needs, my Aquila is starting to jam constantly after years of good service, I know I could probably muck around, change some fans and fix it but I'm kinda looking to upgrade anyway.
I was looking at the Bambu line and I love the A1 but $629+shipping (with the combo) just feels a bit silly as it's for myself and it's not printing stuff to earn me money and the mini is too small unfortunately.
I see now the Sv06 is on for a helluva deal on Amazon for $239CAD, it LOOKS really nice but most importantly, is it an UPGRADE from an Aquila? Or a lateral move? I love the auto-leveling, the all metal hotend, the dual Z axis, direct drive and that but will I see much improvement over my X2? (I don't print exotic materials, just PLA and PETG)
To get the most out of the SV06 you need to set it up to run Klipper and do input shaping. The motion system is very capable, being linear rods. (Grease the bearings, expect to change them out at some point, they aren't great quality, still better than v wheels). It needs input shaping to go fast. Also a 5015 part cooling fan will help.
The inductive probe is also not the best, there are better probes out there, but it's passable.
Overall it depends. It's has a few quality of life improvements out of the box and it's a decently solid machine that needs a few mods. If you don't mind tinkering, you can make it into a very fast machine. If you don't want to tinker and are ok with the closed ecosystem the Bambu A1 is hard to beat out of the box. The SV06 can print faster than the A1 if your willing to change out the hotend to something higher flow, run better part cooling and run klipper and input shaper on it. But at that point you need to print ABS or ASA for the higher temps that a custom toolhead will require, which you may not want to do.
There is a mod to put stealthburner on it, which is a decent toolhead (it looks cool and has ok part cooling if you use a high speed 5015 fan). I would pair that with an orbiter 2 (there is a mount if you search for it), and a rapido hotend. I would also add an EBB36 Can board. Total for that is going to probably be another $200 CAD.