The PIRX one Debuts

By on February 6th, 2015 in printer

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PIRX 3D has launched the PIRX 1.0, a very interesting consumer 3D printer. 

We first encountered PIRX at last fallā€™s London 3D Printshow, where we were impressed with their experimental color 3D printing prototype. That capability does not appear to be included in this announcement, as the ā€œoneā€ is a monocolor 3D printer. 

The attractive filament extruding machine has some impressive statistics. In its generous 210 x 270 x 210 build volume, it can print layers as small as 0.03mm (30 microns). A wide variety of materials are supported due to the included heated print surface; PLA, Nylon, PS, Laywood, Ninjaflex, ABS and more can work in this machine. 

According to PIRX 3D, the machine can print at ā€œhigh speedā€. Although weā€™re not sure of the exact speeds, the machine is built from ā€œhigh-quality parts, custom made linear guides and optical Z end stopsā€, so itā€™s likely this is true. Regardless, the prints look pretty darn good, as you can see here. 

The key feature of the PIRX 1.0 is automatic bed leveling. Hereā€™s how it works: before print commences, a sensor checks the bed height at several positions. From these measurements, the software understands the tilt of the bed, even if only slightly tilted. Then the first layer print is dynamically adjusted by raising and lowering the bed very slightly to compensate for the tilt as the extruder moves about. This is a feature that should be included on every 3D printer. 

Whatā€™s missing? Just the color printing we saw in the prototype. But before you can do that, you must sell the ā€œbasicā€ machine. It wonā€™t be surprising if they announce a color feature on future machines, but for now, you can order a PIRX 1.0 for only ā‚¬1200 (USD$1360). 

Via PIRX 3D

By Kerry Stevenson

Kerry Stevenson, aka "General Fabb" has written over 8,000 stories on 3D printing at Fabbaloo since he launched the venture in 2007, with an intention to promote and grow the incredible technology of 3D printing across the world. So far, it seems to be working!