I get what you are saying about the feeling. That is what prompted me to get some parts printed up by a company - I had an idea for something, sketched it up in Fusion 360 and uploaded it. 1 week and £20 (about $25) later, I have the parts.short version;
If you enjoy the making side of it as a hobby, cost of entry can be under $500 USD and is well worth it.
If you don't enjoy the tinkering, farm out your requirements to those of us who do.
Long version;
My experience is that 3d printers are very much a hobby... They require some tinkering with settings and such on a regular basis. If you enjoy the whole hobby they are great. In terms of cost effectiveness... Iffy. I have printed enough usefull things that they are worth more than my investment in the printer, however many are things that I would not have bought. I have caps on the inlet plugs of all the 2nd stages I've rebuilt, but am not currently using... Over $100 worth of caps and plugs if I bought them. But I wouldn't have bought them.
Where the having a 3d printer shines is when you start to learn the design side and create 1 off parts, or the replacement for that "out of production" piece you need. Some one asked me about a one off that they needed yesterday morning.... I'm a nerd, so the prototype goes in the mail to him today. It's a cool feeling seeing what was in your mind translated to plastic without going through anyone else.
Respectfully
James
I can justify it to myself but getting SWMBO to agree to it and moving things around to fit it in is an entirely different matter...

It appears from something I have read that there might be a 3d printer at one of the local libraries but I will have to investigate that a bit more.