Looks just like an Ender 3 v2. Rebranded? If so, looks like a great price.
Probably not, ender 3 is 220x220x250 print area not build area, and the controller is different, but seems to be a good cheap side printer for the price
Probably not, ender 3 is 220x220x250 print area not build area, and the controller is different, but seems to be a good cheap side printer for the price
Even still has the stylized V(oxelab) logo on the hotend cover.
Sounds like they ship with Aquila branded control boards, but they have the H32-based boards, which have been harder to flash, and less supported by 3rd party firmware control boards.
Beware of this brand, I am not saying this is a bad product but customer support is horrible. Last year I got their SLA mini and it broke after 2 uses. Their customer support has not yet got any replacement after 6 months now
How is the Kobra Go? I saw it was offered at a great price a few weeks ago. TIA
So 3D printing is not newbie friendly in general. The Kobra Go is marketed as a "newbie friendly" printer. It's not.
That being said, once you get past the learning curve, it's a really solid printer that I've been using for about 6 months now. I've never used another 3D printer so my "recommendation" wouldn't really carry any weight but I'm really glad I bought it. Paid $169 or something btw.
I have had multiple monoprice 3d printers. Every one has broken down within the first few uses. One was an electrical issue, and they accepted a return but wouldn't replace. The second was a connection failure between the screen/motherboard and the mechanical components. There is little to no support. I have heard you can use a raspberry pi to run the machine and bypass the onboard screen etc. but seems like a lot of guesswork. If you want a project, enders are a similar price and at least the issues are known and there are community resources.
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Probably not, ender 3 is 220x220x250 print area not build area, and the controller is different, but seems to be a good cheap side printer for the price
That's a rebranded voxelab aquila.
Sounds like they ship with Aquila branded control boards, but they have the H32-based boards, which have been harder to flash, and less supported by 3rd party firmware control boards.
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That being said, once you get past the learning curve, it's a really solid printer that I've been using for about 6 months now. I've never used another 3D printer so my "recommendation" wouldn't really carry any weight but I'm really glad I bought it. Paid $169 or something btw.