My name is David Hargrove; i'm a contributor to the Klipper Firmware project, long time open source developer in the 3d printing community,and currently the Product Lead for the PrintM3D Crane Line of printers. The Crane comes in three flavors: a bowden version, a dual mixing head, and a quad mixing(CMYK(ey) based head. All of these are based on the Duet 2 Maestro, an Open Hardware project jointly designed and delivered by M3D and Duet3d. I'm also the Lead Systems Engineer for PrintM3D.
I reached out to Jonathan recently about KissSlicer, as I've been a fan for some time. He was happy enough to provide me with a key to use for development purposes and I must say I am totally blown away by KissSlicer Premium Alpha 2; so much that I've already purchased a personal license and prepare to do so for the company this week. I emailed Jonathan earlier, and again accused him of being a time-traveler... he seems to be hitting the exact targets we anticipated without any communication between our two parties... the only plausible reason is that he simply traveled to the future, determined the best tech, and brought it back...

But, truly, I would love to know if we have any others that have or plan to purchase a Crane or ProMega printer(both are Duet 2 Maestro based). Also, and really more to the point of what I am after: is there anyone out there that is planning to purchase a Maestro and head separately for upgrading another printer? If you fall into these categories, I'd love to have open discussion with you here.. especially if you are interested in the mixing heads. I'd also love to hear if you've attempted mixing with the Diamond hotend or any other multi-in, single-out mixing extruders.
While we have various color mixing methods in place for Cura, Slic3r, and even some of our community's homebrewed slicers, we still haven't quite honed in out what we think fits best as far as color-mix based slicing. I even tried using Monolith today and just became confused to the point of needing to take a break for an hour. =P Anyways, I want you all to know: none of this is an advertisement, none of it is trying to convince you to buy a printer or anything of the sort; my guiding principle is transparency.
If you have any color mixing experience you'd like to bring to the table, please note this entire project from our side of development will be consistently available on Github... I am in fact in the process of rebasing some of our repos now in preparation for our first consumers purchasing the Crane.
Thanks and I hope we'll all be able to work on some cool stuff together!
Thanks,
David Hargrove