![]() They will be carried out in order for the backers of the Kickstarter campaign currently in place. Any device with web connection can control it (PC, phone, tablet, particularly smart smartwatches, even augmented reality headset eventually).Īvailability won't come immediately, but shipments should commence in January 2015. It also has an LCD (the first UV-based one with such a thing) and a 10-hour battery that lets you print stuff on the go. Altogether, the product uses 2.7W of energy. The resolution is of 0.39 microns vertically by the way, and the material used is Makerjuice or iBox Reson. The whole thing measures only 4 x 3 x 8 inches / 100 x 75 x 200 mm, meaning that the build volume is of only 40 x 20 x 90 mm / 1.57 x 0.78 x 3.54 inches. Then again, the newcomer does have one limitation: it's really, really small. That's why this new iBox Nano is such a game changer: it shows that SLA can run FDM out of business. However, they still hold tags several times larger than FDM models. SLA 3D printers cost several tens of thousand of dollars for a while, but now they manage to stay below the ten grand mark, and the best consumer-oriented ones managed to sell for less than half of that. The result is much more detailed and precise than on FDM printers, and without the inevitable wrinkles and ridges that show where each layer was placed. SLA 3D printing works by bombarding resin (held in a tank) with UV light, curing it and essentially growing the required object. Why SLA printing at this price is amazingĪmazing is putting it lightly. Instead, it employs SLA, or stereolithography. Its creators claim that the gizmo is not only the most diminutive resin printer. However, the iBox Nano doesn't use such technology. Weve seen our share of 3D printers round these parts, but the iBox Nano could be one of the smallest yet. This way you can produce parts with remarkably smooth exterior surfaces. This price would be low enough for an FDM printer, which builds objects drop by drop by melting plastic filament through an extruder. The QIDI Tech i-Box is an LCD 3D printer that can print layers at a minimum layer height of 25 m. Why do we say that? Because it has released the iBox Nano 3D printer, whose price is of only $189 / €189, at least for early bird backers on Kickstarter.Įven if you don't participate in the crowdfunding campaign, you won't have to pay more than $229 to $269 / €229 to €269 via retail. However, iBox Printers has just upturned the entire industry. Improved that the FEP film is excessively pulled and often damaged during printing of large-size models.The redesigned structure ensure the service life of the FEP film.For a 3D printer to be considered cheap, it has to sell for around $500 / €500 or less, with the smallest and most modest, tech-wise, FDM models needing only around $250 / €250. The newly developed aluminum casting resin vat is optimized to match the latest generation of FEP film. Ibox 8.9 Mono adopts high-precision screen with an HD resolution of 3840 x 2400.The 8.9 inch 4K screen has good stability and long life.The time of exposure is as low as 1.5-2 seconds and the max print speed is 60mm/s. Using the latest slicing format files, the slicing speed is greatly improved. Ibox 8.9 Mono using the matrix parallel light source, 40 pcs UV LED lamp source combination,ensuring superior print results and a more accurate printing size.It is perfectly compatible with the latest Chitu software, which is smarter and easier to operate. Sturdy Build Quality and Higher PrecisionĬNC machined aluminum body makes ibox 8.9mono a very formidable printer.Z-axis utilizes a double linear guide-way structure,which can achieve steadier motion and greatly enhanced moving accuracy, and the accuracy of the Z axis can reach 0.00125mm. With a build volume measuring 192 x 120 x 200mm/7.55 x 4.72 x 7.87 inches, QIDI ibox is capable of printing larger prints, offering your creations more possibilities.
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