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Oct 2015

Great post!

I run sales & Marketing for Fusion3 and agree with a lot of your points - we encounter a lot of these issues when trying to tell the story about our products.

When shopping for a printer, there’s so much more than specs and price to inform your decision. Final print quality at the speeds and layer height / setting you need to print in is VERY important. The Make shootout does a good job of trying to use apples to apples comparisons and we recommend that prospective customers get a sample print of their designs so they can see first-hand the end results of the different printers. Material costs are also very important for those printers that don’t embrace an ‘open materials’ (razor blade) model. 3 other factors that we don’t see discussed a lot: 1) quality and nature of service and support; 2) reliability (ability of printer to deliver a finished print at expected quality on a repeated basis) and 3) durability (how long will the printer run before you see parts fail).

Chris… this is Tony from Techshot. You sent me a sample ABS print of a military battery housing mockup printed on your machine. I will say that the Fusion3 was able to print that part with less warping and with equal surface finish quality as the Zortrax. I was impressed.

Thanks for the kind words, Tony! Did you end up purchasing a printer?

@gabriella3d - interested in learning how to get products listed in your next guide? I run Sales & Marketing for Fusion3. Our printers are in the 3D Hubs database. Due to our focus on EDU and Commercial use, we don’t get as much attention as consumer / prosumer, but would like to think that we’d be a worthy addition to your guide.

9 days later

I have to agree with the Zortrax printers, I have a Makerbot Replicator X2, Taz 4 with upgrades, Cube Pro Single, Cube Pro Duo, 3 Zortrax M200’s and 2 Cube 3’s for FDM printers. The Zortrax M200 has become my workhorses for FDM prints, they are running 24x5 for the most part.

Great insights here! I loved the tank turret cake topper from your hub page btw - just curious how it worked out in the end? What did you use to power it?

It worked great. My nephew loved it. I used a hobby servo and a Maestro controller from Pololu.com with a simple 4 pack of AA’s to power everything.

9 months later

Great info I’ve been looking for. Honest info from someone who uses the printer.

There are so many choices is crazy. It’s down to for me:

Zortrax M200

Cubicon Single

Makeegear M2

Raise 3d

But realistically its between the Zortrax and the Cubicon single. Any thoughts ?

Printers have improved so much since this review I can’t really offer up to date advice now. A friend of mine bought a $600 open source printer and made a few simple mods and is getting some excellent prints from that machine. The one advantage that the Zortrax still has is that you don’t have to learn how to adjust 50 different print settings to get excellent prints. It just has a few preference type settings and you just print. If you want a lot of flexibility in materials then the Zortrax isn’t the best choice. If you want great prints without a lot of tinkering then it’s a great choice.