I already have my own CAD software that I’ve become pretty proficient at over the years. But “test” printing in MJF isn’t that cost effective clearly. The X1C is the exact printer I’m looking at to be honest. I am planning on getting the AMS as well but I’m thinking about printing mostly in PETG over PLA or ABS. PLA I from my understanding is the most friendly but also the most brittle so some of the smaller, more delicate designs I dont think will work. I’d rather not modify the parts either but thats a bridge to cross at a later date. ABS is tempting but from all the info I’ve gathered PETG seems to have the best balance of the two. The P1P is an option as well but I like the enclosure of the X1C and the ability to upgrade to carbon fiber down the line if desired.
Here's my thoughts on filaments, based on my experience building R2-D2 parts.
PLA: easy to print, very very durable, inexpensive. Impossible to solvent weld, so any joins have to be glued. This is inherently weaker, and means you're painting over two different substrates; this is certainly doable, but it complicates life. Because PLA is so durable, it takes a lot of work to sand it smooth. Finally, PLA has a fairly low glass transition temperature of about 60 degrees. (C, I'm Canadian and think in real measurements.

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PLA is very good for stand alone parts that don't need to hide the fact that they're 3d printed and aren't going to be near windows, in vehicles, or used in high-friction situations. PLA makes an excellent doorstop; I've also used it to make all sorts of mounts and jigs and even a battery tray for motocycle-battery sized LiFePO4 batteries. It's also good for prototyping parts that will end up in some other plastic.
PLA+ is PLA with something added to it. It's not a standard, it's an advertising hook, and every manufacturer's PLA+ is different. Common additives are to increase the glass transition temperature or to make it easier to solvent weld. I've only used PLA+ by accident, so I don't have a lot of knowledge on it.
PETG is
almost as easy to print as PLA. It's melting point is the top end of the safe zone in a PTFE-lined hotend, which a lot of lower-cost printers use. You do have to be cautious about the print surface, as PETG can bond too well to either glass or PEI sheets - especially textured PEI. PETG is actually slightly less durable than PLA, meaning a PETG coathanger would fail sooner than a PLA one. However, it's just a tiny bit flexible, which means it's very good for things with a mechanical join like a screw - the plastic flexes a bit around the metal, rather than chewing itself up on it.
PETG has a higher glass transition temperature, somewhere around 90C, making it reasonably safe in most non-industrial environments. It
can be solvent welded, but it needs extremely toxic chemicals like MEK. (MEK is a controlled substance in many jurisdictions like Europe and California because it's really quite dangerous.) PETG is made of PET, and PET has a reputation for being difficult to paint, although I'm starting to conclude that's less a characteristic of the plastic itself and more a side effect of most things being made from PET being both extremely smooth and vacuum-molded, and thus likely contaminated with release agents.
I use PETG for things like lenses and diffusers, where even an LED might get hot enough to be an issue over time (and because the stores I shop at are more likely to have transparent PETG than transparent PLA). I also use it for things that need screws, like an L-bracket or the thing that holds my droid's centre wheels onto the (wooden) centre foot.
ABS has a much higher glass transition temperature. It also has a higher melting point, enough that a PTFE lined hotend is going to start off-gassing nerve agents, and so should only be used on an all-metal hotend. It can be solvent-welded with acetone or even model cement (which is basically acetone) to get a nice strong bond with no foreign materials. It's also softer than the other plastics (there's a reason why plastic gaming miniatures are usually cast in ABS) so it's relatively easy to sand, for anything that need to be finished and painted.
The main doinside to ABS is that it shrinks slightly when it cools, and if your printer isn't enclosed the middle of a print will start to cool even while the top (fresh out of the nozzle) and the bottom (sitting on the heated build plate) are still warm. This can result in warping or even delaminating. So you need a good printer and you need to know what you're doing, to print ABS. But, if you can print it, the finishing work is a great deal less.
As for the X1C: this is a great printer, but keep in mind that it was designed to print carbon-fibre filaments. ABS is really the
bottom end of its intended use-case. If you're printing PLA on it regularly, you want to get a PEI print surface and you'll need to take off the lid; even then the auxillary cooling fan will be on full blast and the thing will be
loud. Basically, using an X1C to print PLA is like taking your Peterbuilt tracto-trailer to the 7-Eleven for a pack of chips. You can do it, but it's really not using the machine's capabilities.
My recommendation: If you're just planning to print PLA & PETG, look at the P1P instead. There's also totally unsubstatiated rumours of a "P1S" which the Interwebs are assuming will be an upgraded version. The P1P is slightly less user-friendly (especially if you're avoiding the cloud-based features) but its a lot less money, just as precise (it's the exact same motion system) and well-suited for the lower temperature filaments.
On the other hand, if you can afford the money cost and aren't planning to have the printer in your bedroom or office (which I think is a bad idea with any 3d printer), the X1C will do what you've described as your goal, and has that extra capacity in reserve for when you decide to make an ABS or carbon fibre blaster.
And of course this is all just my opinion, you should definitely do the thing that feels right to you!