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5 / 11
Sep 2016

Hi @Coopstercoop like a lot of tech equipment, it really depends upon what you want to do, both in terms of what you want (or expect) to produce as finished prints and/or whether you want to learn about 3D printing technology, or just want a 3D printer that works out of the box.

Bear in mind that if this is your price range, you’re way down at the very bottom of the list, so you can’t expect much in terms of quality or reliability. That doesn’t mean any machine at this price point won’t be reliable, simply that you can’t expect it to be. If you’re new to 3D printing and do want to learn a bit about the tech, then it makes sense not to spend too much, so in that respect the price itself is not so much of a concern, but you should be looking for good “backup” in terms of online solutions and support and that really means picking a machine that has a large user base so that any problems you come across (and you will) have almost certainly been faced by one or (many) more people before you, who hopefully have solved that problem.

Looking at the one you’ve linked to, there doesn’t seem to be much direct chat in the forum for the machine but it seems decent enough in quoted specs. All I’d say is that it’s a clone of the Wanhao Duplicator i3, which (at least for the prices I see here in the UK) is not much dearer, and that machine is a version of the Prusa i3… If it were me, I’d probably try to stretch to the Wanhao as it has a lot of support around (from users).

As I said, it’s really difficult to advise without more details. If you can tell us some more about what you want to do and your interest in 3D printing, we may be able to give better advice…

Hi Cooper,

This looks like a rebadged Wanhao duplicator i3 v 2.1. It’s a good model, many 3d printers had their start with a Wanhao model. There is also a newer version of the i3 which Wanhao sells, the i3 PLUS. (Wanhao i3 duplicator plus 1)

All the best!

Mason

Main purpose will be printing parts for a quad walker robot I’m making, plus a couple bits for RC buggies. Happy to out in the time to learn and if need be assemble a printer, but the robot project started off a coding project, then included 3d modeling and now 3d printing. So a pre assembled one would be a nice to have, but not mandatory. Looked at a few kits (in particular the tevo Tauranga) and still considering them. Just not keen on the exposed 240v power connectors on most them.

5 months later

I regularly use metal filaments, a normal nozzle would be shredded before a single print would finish