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Website | formlabs.com |
Pricing URL | Official Form 2 Pricing |
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Website | carbide3d.com |
Pricing URL | - |
Based on our record, The Nomad 883 Pro should be more popular than Form 2. It has been mentiond 5 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Not sure where you're looking at that at but the direct homepage the updated Form3 which is Form3+ is 2,499 retails. Ebay itself is a marketplace of individual sellers. What they value it as and see it as is up to them entirely. If you look at formlabs.com they don't sell the regular 3 or 2 anymore. Refurbish Form 3 is there but I'm sure thats the last of whatever is left in warehouse. Source: 11 months ago
Or if you need very detailed models, their dlp printer is great too - but the leaders in the resin area are more formlabs (https://formlabs.com/). Resin printing is great for extremely detailed items, but it's generally more expensive and requires more time investment for the parts (prep and post-processing required) - but still definitely hobbyist/casual friendly. Source: over 2 years ago
Rizél: So I did an internship at a company called Formlabs, and it's like a 3D printing startup. And then, after that, I already had another internship lined up at this company called Veson Nautical. And I ended up staying there and going full time. - Source: dev.to / over 2 years ago
Silver and gold should be easy for any machine to cut, especially since you are just drilling holes. The problem is the alignment, you will need a very precise jig to hold them and you will need to be very good at setting the machine zero. If you are off just a few thousanths, your holes will be misaligned. A small desktop machine like the Carbide3d Nomad would work. To get it aligned properly you would probably... Source: almost 2 years ago
The Nomad would be my first thought. If that's too small, you're into Tormach territory. Source: over 2 years ago
However, looking at what you said you wanted to make, you mention model parts and other smaller components. The only budget friendly machine I can think of that might be able to do that sort of stuff is the Carbide Nomad. Source: over 2 years ago
For metal, l'd suggest the Nomad, a Bantam, or a Tormach mill (I don't know if any of these are in stock). You could also get a manual vertical mill and cnc it. Grizzly and Little Machine Shop are both good companies and have mills in stock. (I think Precision Matthews and Dropros are back ordered). Then, you can get anything you want for wood, since it's a lot less demanding. Source: about 3 years ago
The Nomad or the xsTECH Router are the first two that come to mind. Source: about 3 years ago
ZMorph - A multi-fab 3D printer that enables fast product prototyping
Shapeways - Shapeways - 3D Printing Service and Marketplace
Obsidian 3D Printer - The $99 3D printer
i.materialise - i.materialise is an online 3D printing service, community and marketplace.
Glowforge - The 3D laser printer
3D Hubs - Airbnb for 3D printing