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101017001 Pro2 Plus 3D Printer, Dual Extruder, Fully Enclosed

  • Based on 16 reviews
Condition: New
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Fulfilled by 3D Printlife, LLC
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Features

  • Dual extruder: electronic driven lifting; 4 increased torque performance; diverse filament compatibility (300C)
  • Massive build volume (12 x 12 x 23. 8 in); minimum 0. 01Mm layer height
  • Filament sensor/ camera/ hepa filter
  • 7" Touch Screen; Resume Print after Power Outage; Wireless Compatibility
  • 32 bit motion control board
  • With 1-Year Limited

Description

Born from the drive for absolute quality, the Pro2 Plus refines 3D printing for production grade environments. Upgrading and evolving traditional manufacturing.

Brand: Raise3D


Material: ABS, PC, PLA, Wood, Nylon (PA), PVA/BVPH, Flexible (TPU/TPE), Carbon Fiber, Metal, PETG


Color: Black


Compatible Devices: Laptop


Supported File Format: STL


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 49 x 28 x 28 inches; 148 Pounds


Item model number ‏ : ‎ 101017001


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ May 24, 2018


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Raise 3D


Best Sellers Rank: #632,224 in Industrial & Scientific (See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific) #882 in 3D Printers


#882 in 3D Printers:


Customer Reviews: 3.1 3.1 out of 5 stars 16 ratings


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Good and Bad
I've been using this printer at work for some time now and it is good and bad. Good in the fact that once you get it dialed in and swap out the nozzles, it will run fairly well. I'm predominantly printing in PC with Carbon Fiber and PETG with Carbon Fiber and it took a decent amount of fiddling in order to get good prints. (Side note, I've also printed with NylonX and NylonG and it was the same thing, a lot of fiddling before getting it to print well.) I didn't have much success with ABS but also abandoned it relatively quick when we started trying out NylonX. To move to PC, PETG, Nylon with Carbon Fiber materials, I did need to replace the factory nozzles with Olsson Rubys 0.6mm and I do not rely on the Buildtak surface to hold down parts (PVA glue sticks for the win (Elmer's Purple sticks to be exact)). The not so great: We had to get the display replaced within 5-6 months because it stopped working. Raise3d was decent enough to send us out one pretty quick. The display doesn't really seem to have any active cooling, but I'm not sure if that's what lead to it dying or something else. The bad: Raise3d's slicing software is not that great. Ideamaker is enough to get things started but do yourself a favor and download Cura (or something else) to open up some better options/settings. If you don't want the hassle of dialing in/moving to another slicing software, do yourself a favor and back up all of your material profiles before updating Ideamaker. I've lost profiles before in the past because of an update and even had to go through the hassle of re-tweaking settings because something changed between updates and it printed like garbage until I fixed settings. At the end of the day, if you need a large build volume and you don't feel like gluing parts together, it's not the worst printer on the market. I do like the enclosed printer design and don't have to worry about printing Nylon because of it. If you are okay with doing some gluing and don't have to worry about making certain 'production' ready parts (out of certain materials), I would go with a cheaper Ultimaker, Creality, or Prusa option. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2024 by JustAnotherName12

  • Printer is good, software is garbage
This printer produces very good prints reliably with just about zero maintenance if you only ever use PLA. It works pretty well with ABS, not quite as clean. It jams literally every single print with PETG. Do not attempt to use PETG with this printer. So if you want a workhorse that handles PLA or ABS really well, this is a good printer. The Raise3D software, however, is absolute trash. The slicer works fine, it's missing a lot of newer options you can get from other slicers, but it's fine. The printer management software, however, is flat out broken. Just yesterday I had to restart the application EIGHT TIMES to print one part. As soon as you try to remote control a printer, every single mouse click has a 10% chance of crashing the app. It took me eight attempts to open the app, connect to my one printer, go into the model library, and select a model, and start printing it before the desktop app crashed. That's just pathetic. Raise3D told me this was a known problem and they were working on it in 2019, and in 2023 they're still working on it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2024 by 808person

  • A great prosumer level printer. Planning on buying a second.
I am a Sr. Mechanical Engineer for my company and have been the 3D printing lead for at least the last 5 years. My first machine was a 3D Systems Projet 3500 multi jet machine that cost nearly $100k installed. While that machine makes incredibly accurate parts with high fidelity, the material is outrageously expensive at $300/kg. The build platform size is also a limitation for us which required me to send larger parts to a local AM shop to make. On an example FDM build which was rather large volume-wise, my AM vendor of choice charged us $1650 to make four pieces. The build contained less than 2 kg of PLA ($40 of Hatchbox PLA) if printed completely solid. Based on that one build, I was able to justify the capital expense of this printer and realized an ROI of less than 4 months based on real part demand and not made up prints because we can. On top of it all, parts made on the Raise3D FDM machine were within 0.002" of the parts made on the 3D Systems MJM printer at 1/10th the material cost. I still keep both printers active, but the Pro2 Plus sees a lot more action. A few notes from my experience: The PLA that came with the machine wasn't that great from my experience. I even tried drying it in a convection oven that I have in the lab. I have found the Hatchbox black PLA and ABS to work very well. The basic filament settings that come with ideaMaker are good, but there was plenty of room for improvement. I have found the YouTube channel of "Maker's Muse" to be very helpful in optimizing FDM prints. The dual print head has plenty of inertia. Combined with the belt drive results in some ringing in build surfaces. Playing with the accelerations will probably minimize this, but I haven't found it bothersome enough to worry about. Check the build platform level. It is supposed to be pre-leveled from the factory, but I found that one corner was too close to the nozzle which prevented extruding. Building on a raft hid the issue from me until I printed a large part right to the platform. The part failed to stick and resulted in half a kilo of PLA being bonded to the extruder in a giant mess. I ended up replacing the extruder, cartridge heater, and thermocouple. It took $150 and several hours to get back up and running. Re-leveling fixed the problem. Check the brass bushings on the X and Y axis. Mine were lose from the factory resulting in one sliding out and the nozzle crashing into the build platform. I always wait for most of the first layer to print before I leave the machine and caught it before it became a real problem. All-in-all I am very happy with this machine. Part quality is very good (better than some of the parts that I received from my AM vendor) and it is printing something just about every day. I plan to buy a regular Raise 3D Pro2 to add additional capacity as word spreads within the organization that we have this new capability. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2019 by pvtschultz

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