There is by
no means a shortage of teams
working on low-cost 3D printers. Kickstarter is absolutely overflowing with
them. But, as many of those teams quickly realize, shipping hardware is hard.
A challenger approaches! Arduino, the company best known for
building and shipping the absurd number of microcontrollers that power many a DIY electronics project, is about to
enter the 3D printing market.
Arduino made the news official today, announcing a
partnership with Italy’s up-and-coming printer manufacturer, Sharebot. Their
first printer will be called the Materia 101, and is built to print in PLA.
While they’re holding off on announcing the exact price for
now, they’ve ballparked two different models: a pre-built package that will
sell for “less than 1000 USD”, and a DIY kit that will go for “less than 800
USD”.
Is it the
prettiest printer in all the lands? Nah — it looks a bit like the super early
MakerBot Cupcake machines, albeit white. Does it have the biggest print bed?
Nah — see below for the specs there. But it’s exciting to see a company like
Arduino, with its damned impressive ability to scale and its tendency to
opensource everything it does, get into the space.
The Specs:
Printing technology: Fused Filament Fabrication
Printing area: 140 x 100 x 100 mm (5.5 x 3.93 x 3.93 inches)
X and Y theorical resolution position: 0.06 mm (60 microns)
Z resolution: 0.0025 mm
Extrusion diameter: 0.35 mm
Filament diameter: 1.75 mm
Optimal temperatures with PLA: 200-230°
Tested and supported filaments: PLA
Unsupported but tested filaments: Cristal Flex, PLA Thermosense, Thermoplastic Polyuretane
(TPU), PET, PLA Sand, PLA Flex
External dimensions: 310 x 330 x 350 mm
Weight: 10 kg
Usage: 65 watt
Electronical board: Official Arduino Mega 2560 with Open Source Marlin Firmware
LCD display 20 x 4 with encoder menu
Preloaded with PLA printing presets
Extruder block with filament pressure regulation
Printing area: 140 x 100 x 100 mm (5.5 x 3.93 x 3.93 inches)
X and Y theorical resolution position: 0.06 mm (60 microns)
Z resolution: 0.0025 mm
Extrusion diameter: 0.35 mm
Filament diameter: 1.75 mm
Optimal temperatures with PLA: 200-230°
Tested and supported filaments: PLA
Unsupported but tested filaments: Cristal Flex, PLA Thermosense, Thermoplastic Polyuretane
(TPU), PET, PLA Sand, PLA Flex
External dimensions: 310 x 330 x 350 mm
Weight: 10 kg
Usage: 65 watt
Electronical board: Official Arduino Mega 2560 with Open Source Marlin Firmware
LCD display 20 x 4 with encoder menu
Preloaded with PLA printing presets
Extruder block with filament pressure regulation
Source: techcrunch.com
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