A commonly-accepted product marketing aphorism is "Fast, cheap,orgood: pick two." With theAnycubic Kobra 2 , however, you get all three. The printer is astonishingly fast, fairly inexpensive (certainly compared to others in its speed class), and produces surprisingly clean prints.
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The Kobra 2 is an FDM (fused deposition modeling) 3D printer, which means it uses melted extruded filament to build objects layer by layer. The other common type of 3D printer is a resin (or SLA) printer, named after stereolithography. Resin printers use a liquid resin that is hardened by light exposure, also layer by layer.
Generally (and this is a pretty broad generalization), you can build bigger, more robust parts with a filament printer, and smaller, more highly detailed parts with a resin printer. If you're building a shelf bracket, you'd want to use a filament printer. If you want to build a tiny person for a diorama, you'd use a resin printer.
An excellent budget printer with a lot of features common to much more expensive options.
View at AmazonThe Kobra 2 printer uses a heated extruder to melt the filament and deposit layers on a build plate. It's at the extruder that we start to see some features that help the Kobra 2 print so quickly.
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The extruder is direct-drive, which means it pulls the filament directly into the hot end. This provides the printer more control over filament movement compared to printers that have the gearing mechanism some distance away from the extruder.
Faster printers tend to use this remote push mechanism because it makes the gantry lighter, and therefore less subject to forces of inertia. But the Kobra 2 uses robust metal wheels to support the entire extruder mechanism, so they don't wear down after heavy use.
David Gewirtz/It also uses dual lead screws, which move the gantry up and down evenly, although it is interesting that the two lead screws are coordinated by a rubber belt, rather than another metal part. Even so, it works.
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The bottom line, though, is whether the printer prints faster and maintains print quality. And it does. Just check out how pretty this dice castle came out.
David Gewirtz/Here's where the speed is apparent. I printed the castle on the Anycubic Kobra 2 in 4 hours and 30 minutes. On Anycubic'sVyper printer , it took 7 hours and 26 minutes, on the Creality Sermoon D1, it took 6 hours and 52 minutes, and on the$6,000 Ultimaker S5, it took 7 hours and 43 minutes. All four used print settings of 10% infill and an 0.2mm layer height, and were done using a 0.4mm nozzle.
Here's the final product from the Anycubic Kobra 2.
David Gewirtz/Without any special tuning, the Kobra 2 was roughly 30-45% faster than the other printers. Anycubic claims a 5X speed improvement, and that may be possible (a) with a lot of tuning, and (b) compared to a poorly configured comparison printer.
The line across the wing is the only defect I found in any of the prints I've done on this printer. And this dragon is a particularly difficult print for an FDM printer to do.
David Gewirtz/Even so, speed increases of 30-45% right out of the box running the default configuration is impressive and can lead to some considerable time savings.
At 250 x 220 x 220mm, the build area is slightly smaller than the Anycubic Vyper I reviewed last year. At$269 via Anycubic's site or $279 on Amazon (make sure you apply the coupon, if available), it's also less expensive. In fact, the capabilities list (beyond the extra fast printing) for this under-$300 printer is impressive: automatic bed leveling, a removable print surface, filament runout sensors, power-fail resume, and a LCD touch panel to control it all.
I bottom-lined this printer to you in the first sentence. It is an excellent printer, especially given its price and speed. Unless I discover something in ongoing use, the Anycubic Kobra 2 is going to be my standard recommendation for an entry-level, yet powerful printer. For under$300, I have yet to see anything that comes close.
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