Hi @SazzaBee prints coming from an SLA machine are still covered in the uncured resin and this needs to be washed off. Rather than explaining, FormLabs have this very nice visual explanation of finishing:
https://formlabs.com/support/finishing/basic-finishing-steps/
To be honest, it looks like more work than you’d need to do in many FDM prints! I’d question @AGPrototypes assertion that SLA machines lack the definition - the Form 2 can print down to 25 microns and a good FDM printer can go down to 50 microns (and some lower still). To put this in perspective, a well made print at 50 microns is going to feel practically smooth. The Envisiontec machine is very nice, but at almost £10,000 is four times your budget and hardly practical for just starting out and with an uncertain income. According to the spec sheet it’s also got a minimum resolution of 50 microns, so the Form 2 is higher and FDM can match that.
The argument in favour of SLA in terms of them being rarer is difficult to prove. In my (albeit limited) experience, most of the orders I get demanding the highest quality don’t really need it. For example, I’ve had orders asking for 100 micron prints for objects with flat sides and surfaces and/or where the part was a draft and it’s really not necessary in those situations. SLA is a must for some objects, partly because of the difference in how the objects are actually formed and partly because it can avoid the problems with isotropy (FDM prints are usually weak in a certain direction, due to how they’re built layer by layer). SLA can produce amazing prints, but personally I wouldn’t put much weight in it being a better bet in terms of ongoing customer orders, especially (as I’m sure you would be) you’re going to give honest advice on whether that extra cost is actually necessary.
As I said before, I think you really need to eliminate FDM by a practical test; at the moment there appears to be no strong case for either technology (when considering costs, clean up, etc.) so if you can prove a good case for not using one, it leaves you with a stronger case for the other.
If you’d like to send me a sample file to print, I’ll happily do my best with FDM and send it across. While I can’t guarantee I’ll be the best FDM printer out there, it should at least give you something you can hold in your hands and look at as an example.