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Aug 2015

Hey guys,

I’m pretty new to the 3D printing world and I’ve been researching 3D printers for my company. I’m looking for a 3D printer that is under $10,000 and can print usable parts and some prototypes. The majority of what it will be used for is fixtures (templates that parts can be placed on and modified) and possible some end-of-arm-tooling. So the prints need to be strong.

My question is whether an SLA or an FDM/FFF printer will suit these needs better. I know that SLA prints degrade after some time in sunlight. Would they degrade if used indoors? How durable are SLA prints compared to FDM prints?

Some printers I’ve been considering are the Stratasys Mojo, the Zortrax Inventure, the Leapfrog Xeed, the Formlabs Form 1+, the FSL Pegasus Touch and the Tangible Engineering Solidator.

Any suggestions/information/tips are welcome.

Thanks for the help!

Brian

  • created

    Aug '15
  • last reply

    Oct '15
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What build volume do you need?

The Zortrax (M200) is great for it’s price. It can compete with the Mojo in print quality. The Inventure looks really great on paper but it’s not on the market yet so i can’t tell you first hand how it will work.

The Mojo is a good printer but not very cheap and also the material is a little more expensive than other brands,

FFF/FDM is a cheap way to print usable parts and strong prototypes.

SLA can be great for prototyping but it’s a more messy way of printing and limited in it’s material choice. The Formlabs is a nice printer for a good price.

SLA is good for detailed and small objects. It’s not great for usable parts.

Do you want to experiment and tweak with your printer too? For example try out new and exotic materials? Than you need a machine that can do that too like an Ultimaker, Mankati, Creatbot (big printers).

The Leapfrog is not my first choice due to it’s price, printing quality and stability.

I use multiple printers to fill the gaps each brand leaves in possibilities.

Thanks for the info Rada.

The Mojo’s build volume of 5 x 5 x 5 in. is the smallest we want to go.

Why are SLA printers not good for usable parts? Aren’t they stronger because the layers bond better than FDM printing?

2 months later

I have a hobby level printer (a Type Series-A that a buddy of mine built for me - he calls it the Super CupCake - since the electronics he pulled from my older dead MBI CupCake) - and I have a Mojo. I use the Mojo for printing client jobs. Some of my clients have raved that the printed pieces look professionally manufactured - so, that output from the Mojo is hard to beat. I’ve actually produced pieces with small delicate hinges - which work perfectly functional after removal from the Bath system!

Kurt