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Monoprice Delta PRO 3D Printer with (270 x 300 mm) Heated Glass Build Plate, Auto Leveling, Triple Fan, PID Tuning, Fully Assembled

  • Based on 974 reviews
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Availability: Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Dec 1 – Dec 6
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Style: Delta Pro (270 x 300 mm)


Features

  • Auto bed level: no longer will you have to chase the perfect bed level using hex keys & feeler gauges. The new auto bed leveling system allows you to spend less time getting that perfect print started
  • Extra large build volume: the extra large, 270 x 300 mm build volume lets you make full prints of models that would otherwise need to be printed separately and assembled afterward
  • All metal construction: all structural parts and parts related to printing are constructed with metal, fitting together with no room for unwanted movement or warping from external forces
  • Auto pid tuning: the ambient temperature of your environment affects your print. Maintain consistent temperatures during printing by taking advantage of built in pid tuning
  • Fully assembled quiet performance: the delta pro ships fully assembled & ready to print out of the box, so you can spend more time printing & less time prepping. The printer operates at less than 50Db

Description

The delta Pro 3D printer is simple, elegant, powerful, and robust created for the enthusiast and professional alike. It is easy to use with auto bed leveling, heated plate, and WiFi built in and can be assembled in 30 minutes or less. It is built with reliability in mind using quality Japanese and German components, machined effector plate, magnetic effector arms, and machined hot end. Accuracy is key with its glass plate, build volume, and robust main board. The delta Pro 3D printer stands in a Class of its own for the makers who want stunning quality, speed, and ease of use.

Brand: Monoprice


Material: Metal


Color: Black


Product Dimensions: 20.7"D x 37"W x 37"H


Item Weight: 2.2 Pounds


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 37 x 20.7 x 37 inches; 2.2 Pounds


Item model number ‏ : ‎ 130993


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ October 12, 2018


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Monoprice (3D Printing)


Best Sellers Rank: #586,213 in Industrial & Scientific (See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific) #1,469 in 3D Printers


#1,469 in 3D Printers:


Customer Reviews: 3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 974 ratings


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Dec 1 – Dec 6

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Really impressed so far
Very happy so far. Ordered from Monoprice through Amazon here and the printer arrived the next day. It's not perfect, but you can't beat it for the price! There's a Reddit mpminidelta group, and a Wiki at mpminidelta.com which have good resources. There's an active FB group apparently but I have not looked at that. Printed a couple cats perfectly. I put blue painter's tape on the bed to keep the bed clean and make removing the print easier. Have not needed glue-stick or anything else for PLA. I did have one cat fail when I forgot to heat the bed and it came loose from the bed about halfway through the print, so a little glue would probably have prevented that but keeping the bed warm seems to generally do it too. I have now set up Cura and successfully printed a "Low poly fox" model from Thingiverse. It takes some fiddling around to get Cura configured properly. I used the Start and End Gcode from the Cat sample file. Cura by default wanted to print at 150mm/s which is ridiculously fast and just didn't stick to the bed. Changing the speed to something around 40mm/s in Cura made it about the same as the Cat print and I was successful getting the fox to print on the first try after that. I used Cura 3.2.1 along with the device profile available on the mpminidelta wiki. I have been sticking with relatively small objects so far. Problems with using the full bed seem common with this printer due to flatness issues, so I have not wanted to push it yet. Even at full size this printer is relatively limited with the circular bed so rectangular models especially will be size limited. But it's great for small figures and items that fit naturally into a cylindrical volume. I have only tried printing with PLA so far. People report difficulty getting the heated bed to go above 60C or so making ABS printing problematic. The printer claims in its specs it can go to 100C on the bed, but that doesn't currently seem to be the case. People are experimenting with custom firmware as a possible solution for this. My printer shipped from Monoprice on 6/25/18 was version v44.160.3 I have been impressed at how quiet this printer has been so far after hearing how noisy it is supposed to be. So far it has not been loud at all. It comes with an odd 161MB micro SD card which Windows claimed was "damaged" (though it read and worked fine in the printer). I let windows "repair" the card and it's happy now. I have been printing by saving Cura files to a laptop then copying them to the micro SD card using an SD adapter I already had (the printer does not come with a standard SD adapter for the microSD card), then loading the microSD card into the printer. I plan to try setting up Octoprint on a Raspberry Pi to remotely control and monitor the printer. Getting started is really easy. You pull the printer out of the box, remove the packing tape and plastic, plug it in, put in the miniSD card, Home the print carriage from the menu to remove the big packing foam piece, then pre-heat, load your filament, and print as described in the manual (which isn't included in printed form so you have to get it off the SD card or just off the wiki or the Monoprice site). The only issue I had initially was getting the filament through the printer. It seemed to stop before it actually got all the way in and just needed a bit more pushing to get past a restriction. You need to cut an angle/point at the end of the filament to help get it in. Using the Move->Extruder menu option to push the filament through (use the down button to load rather than up as indicated incorrectly in the manual). I pushed the filament a bit while clicking the down button until melted filament started coming out the extruder nozzle. There are some places where the printer does not currently live up to its specs (bed heat limits, etc.) and it can be fiddly and requires some internet research to figure out, but so far for me it's making some great prints and I'm super happy with the performance for the price. It's small, poorly documented, and has some issues, but still at the price how can I not give it five stars? G. P.S. added an image of a few things printed using Amazon Basics PLA in Gold and Perl White. The cats are the sample gcode file that comes with the printer, and the white fox is "Low Poly Fox" on Thingiverse and the articulated dinosaur is "Flexi-Rex Improved" also on Thingiverse (scaled down to 75% to fit comfortably on the bed). The dinosaur worked great and all the links between body segments are loose and he flops around like a length of chain. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2018 by Gavin and Alice Gavin and Alice

  • My Box Arrived Completely Destroyed
I've bought four of these so far. The first time it was because I wanted to print miniatures and knew very little about 3d printers. Then I kept it because it did such amazing work on small stuff, and was great for making small parts. Then I did little upgrades and now I have a formula where I use a hardened steel 0.2mm nozzle with a cheap BMG clone extruder and a capricorn tube with ugpraded fittings, and I upgrade the cooling a little bit with a duct. The build plate on the newest one is a little better, but not by much. You are still going to have problems with hotter filaments. The extruder is decent but an easy upgrade since the firmware can be tweaked in octoprint. The OMG V2 is a great pick for it, or any BMG clone. I love the cheap Haldis see-through one. They all work pretty much identical once you get the gears lining up and a clean path. See-through should just be default for extruders. So why this printer? Well, it's packed by a genius. My last one to arrive (today) showed up in a box that wasn't a cube anymore. All four corners had been kicked in. It literally had bootprints on it. And I didn't care. I didn't even hesitate opening it. Someone is going to break their foot before they break this printer. One of the things people love about the literally triple size FLSun Super Racer is the triple beam construction. THIS TINY PRINTER has the same thing. Massive beams on each corner. Add to the already huge strength of triangles, and this printer is never going to show up broken from shipping. So that's one. THIS IS the strongest 3d printer. You can stand on it. You could build a house out of them. So why else? It's BUILT. It's done. You don't have to build anymore. Turn it on and level it and use it. There's another reason: Auto Leveling! No stupid wheels to spin no nothing. It does it all. And it keeps itself level. It's inexpensive! It's adorable! It has REAL LINEAR RAILS on each corner! Good ones! The small ones don't cost as much as the big ones so they can do that. That makes this printer more accurate than some 500 dollars ones. It does fantastic work! This will be your best small object printer. Kids love it! Maybe too much. I keep giving them away. That's why this is my fourth one now. I've had all generations. They get incrementally better. If the next one has a decent BMG clone extruder and capricorn tubing and steel connectors, I'll only have to change the nozzle. This thing should just come with a 0.2 nozzle. It was made for them. Simply put, outstanding printer. Outstanding value. Get a glue stick or some aquanet or prints won't stick. Otherwise, great product. If you want one a little bigger, get the FLSun Q5 but you will be graduating. You have to build that one, but it doesn't cost much more and has double the built area. I love deltas so I'll probably always have a MP Mini and a Q5. They both are such great printers. One thing, it is clog prone. Keep a socket handy. I keep one on top of the printer. I keep the nozzle only hand tight. It loves most PLA at 190-195 and polymax at 200 dead. The accel and jerk are set really great at the factory. That's most of the speed of deltas. I do most prints at 50-40mm per second even though it can do more. You get slightly better quality. I know folks that have farms of these things, and support themselves selling stuff on etsy. They are that good. You can use them for a business. Anything else um, the spool holder is cute but not that great. I don't use it. I just sit a SunLu filament dryer behind it, and run the filament out of the top corner feed hole on it into the printer. It lines up perfect. DO NOT run a filament dryer while printing. Your filament will get elastic and pulled long and lose diameter and your extruder will lose grip. Learned this the hard way. Hope this helps. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2019 by S. A. Wilson

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