The Pro3 has all the automations and features you’d want in a farm machine: auto bed leveling, integrated webcam, Wi-Fi and ethernet, plus Raise3D printers typically feature user-friendly touchscreens and interfaces, making them easy to operate.
If you are a member of the press looking to speak with someone at Raise3D, please contact us at press@raise3d.com
The Pro3 has all the automations and features you’d want in a farm machine: auto bed leveling, integrated webcam, Wi-Fi and ethernet, plus Raise3D printers typically feature user-friendly touchscreens and interfaces, making them easy to operate.
3D printer manufacturer Raise3D has introduced the DF2 solution, a new addition to its portfolio of professional and industrial 3D printing solutions, at Formnext 2023, and the company’s first resin-based 3D printer.
The RMF500 and E2CF 3D systems are equipped with enhancements to ensure precise and reliable handling of multiple chopped fiber filaments, polymers.
Solid metal parts from filament has dramatically expanded access to 3D printing metal for a wide audience of professionals who had been priced out of the technology. A third category of desktop 3D printers are those dedicated to metal filaments, such as Raise3D’s Forge1.
Raise3D’s two dual extruder printers (the Pro3 series and the new RMF500) feature multi-filament capabilities with extruder temps reaching 300℃, addressing the need for large industrial parts with soluble supports. In late 2022, Raise3D launched a Hyper FFF, which is an optional kit for the Pro3 Series that enables faster printing.
Released in 2021, the E2CF is Raise3D’s dedicated carbon fiber machine. This independent dual extruder printer has a build volume of 295 × 240 × 240 mm and a layer height of 100 microns. The extruder nozzle can get up to 300°C and the build plate maintains a comfortable 110°C. Raise3D says its new silicon carbide nozzles have excellent wear resistance and thermal conductivity, which helps resist carbon fiber’s abrasion.
When buying your first 3D printer for your office, lab, studio, or workshop, the first things you need to think about is the ease of use and customer support. The Pro3 series fine-detail, high-speed 3D filament printers from Raise3D are mini-factories from the start with quality construction and reliable output print after print. Not exactly plug-and-play, but considering the sophistication of its output, relatively little onboarding is needed for great results.
3D printer manufacturer Raise3D has officially launched its new Hyper FFF technology for its Pro2 Series flagship printers, which were first released in 2018 and received an upgrade a year later. The company’s current mission is to make its Hyper FFF, introduced in November, the new print speed standard and increase productivity for its customers. That’s why it’s announced the beginning of the Open-Test Period for Hyper FFF.
Running a small business and looking for an affordable, reliable 3D printer? Check out our guide to the best professional 3D printers under $10,000. Raise3D’s Pro3 Plus dual-extruder FDM 3D printer packs an impressive number of industrial-level features into a unit priced under $10k, especially with its new upgrade launched in late 2022 that makes it much faster.