Kit de montage | Non |
---|---|
Nombre d'extrudeuses | 2 |
Vitesse d'impression | 30 - 300 |
Technologie d'impression | Fused Filament Fabrication |
Afficher | Oui |
---|
Lecteur de carte mémoire | Non |
---|
Consommation électrique opérationnelle (min-max) | 0 - 0 |
---|
Interfaces |
|
---|
Couleur du produit | blanc |
---|---|
Largeur | 342.0 mm |
la taille | 489.0 mm |
Profondeur | 380.0 mm |
Résolution / épaisseur de couche (axe Z) |
|
Max. largeur de la taille de l'objet | 215.0 mm |
Max. taille de l'objet hauteur | 215.0 mm |
Max. profondeur de la taille de l'objet | 300.0 mm |
Taille de buse | 0.4 mm |
Poids | 11.3 kg |
Dimension matérielle | 3mm |
---|---|
Matériaux imprimables |
|
Ultimaker has been taking the maker crowd by storm, but its latest product is looking to address the desktop professional market. Al Dean spends some quality time with the Ultimaker 3 and finds a system that's perfectly suited to professional users
3D Printing has come a long way in a short time. While it is yet to achieve the Star Trek level of immediacy and convenience, "rapid prototyping" has gone from novelty to mainstream, and with
The Ultimaker 3 is a dual-extruder 3D printer that offers some of the highest definition around for a fused-filament fabricator. But it can also be extraordinarily fussy.
The Ultimaker 3 has very good print quality for a 3D printer that prints with plastic filament, and its dual print cores let you print using two filament types or colors.
Design professionals and serious 3D-printer users will find the Ultimaker 3 well worth the high cost, thanks to its excellent print quality and support for a wide range of materials.
Form 1+
Builder3D
Objet1000
Form 2
N2
Witbox