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Artillery(Evnovo) Sidewinder X1 3D Printer Kit - US $417.99 (~AU $621.63) Delivered @ Banggood

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For those in the market for a good big printer, the Artillery(Evnovo)® Sidewinder X1 3D is on special price again

Description from site
● Standard Building Volume:
300300400mm large print size; 150mm/s max print speed. High accuracy printing quality, down to 50 microns.

● Easy Installation and Stable Performance:
95% pre-assembled, easy for installation.
With full aluminum frame design, very stable structure

● Developed Function:
Synchronized Dual Z System
Support power loss detection and recovery.
Support filament runout detection and recovery

● Powerful high quality accessories:
With touch screen control, Rapid Heating AC heatbed, Ultra-quiet Stepper Driver. And titanstyle direct-drive extruder to support flexible materials.

● User-friendly matching: 110v and 220v are available, suitable for working voltage in most parts of the world.

Suitable filament recommended to you
ABS filament 1.75mm 1kg id 1378636
PLA filament 1.75mm 1kg id 1491898
Specification
Build Volume 300 x 300 x 400mm (11.8 x 11.8 x 15.75in)
Layer resolution 0.01mm
Maximum print speed 150mm/s
Maximum trave speed 250mm/s
Print bed Glass-ceramic
Heat bed type Rapid heating AC heat bed
Build plate heat up time 80℃ in less than 2 minutes
Filament diameter 1.75mm
Supported filament PLA, ABS, Flexible PLA, TPU, Wood, PVA, HIPS…
Bed leveling Manual
Print technology FFF (Fused Filament Fabrication)
Extruder type Direct Drive Extruder (Titan type)
XYZ resolution 0.05mm, 0.05mm, 0.1mm
Nozzle type Volcano
Nozzle diameter 0.4mm
Nozzle temperature up to 240℃
Nozzle heat up time < 3 minutes
Noise level < 60 dBA
Power consumption 100V-240V
600W max (with heated bed turned on)
Power supply
Plug EU Standard(220v) or US Standard(110v) - Optional
Control board MKS Gen L
Stepper driver Exclusive ultra-quiet stepper driver
(256 micro-stepping)
Advanced sensors 3 inductive endstop sensors
Machine weight 14kg
Shipping weight 16.5kg
Machine dimensions 550 x 405 x 640mm
550 x 405 x 870mm (w/ spool holder)
Shipping box dimensions 780 x 540 x 250mm

Package Included:

1 x Artillery(Evnovo)® Sidewinder X1 3D Printer Kit
1 x Tools Kits
1 x Usd Disk
1 x US Plus or 1 x EU Plug

Australian Review of it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4y1iIRW-9I

Mod Note: Updated price to reflect GST.

Referral Links

Referral: random (143)

Referee gets $2 in coupons. Referrer gets 10% off (if referee spends over US$10)

Related Stores

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closed Comments

  • I'd love to see a good 150 mm/s print on a 300x300mm print bed…

    • Check out some of the reviews

  • You are forgetting GST so its AUD $621.63

  • This is pretty much the best non resin 3D printer under $1000 right now. Will spit out really high quality prints with minimal tuning. Is one of the cheapest printer with a bed this size too.

    • Do you think its worth grabbing this over a ~$1,000 resin printer for minitures?

      Also there are so many brands of printers in general, are you watching reviews to work out which one is the best or is there a resource you check that ranks all the brands?

      • +1

        just get an anycubic photon and resin from monocure.
        I have an SWX1 and love it but if your doing miniatures just get a photon I doubt you will get much better prints until you spend >$2.5k
        The detail of prints from SLA vs FDM is worlds apart, you struggle to tell something is printed from a photon but it's obvious every time on any FDM including the SWX1

      • +1

        Yeah like the other user said definitely stick with a resin printer if you're mostly planning to print miniatures. The details on these type of printers just don't compare. Watch lots of reviews but the best resource I've found is just finding the facebook group of the printer you're most interested in and see what people are posting about it and ask any questions you have about it before buying.

  • +2

    Last two I've set up the Quality Control has been atrocious. Stripped out screws, total rebuild required on running plates, mainboards with test firmware on it (just goes back and forth) and my favourite being single insulated 240 wires rubbing over the metal casing. Each iteration has also reduced design in favour of cost… new LCD locks up a lot whereas this didn't happen on the older config (fix was to add a reset button next to new ones). They've dropped the ZIF (zero insertion force) sockets for the ribbons so your chance of damaging the cables is now pretty high. You definitely do not want to remove and replug them several times making mods, upgrades and repairs a pain. Fixing the Z sensor limits options for damming the bed down with tighter springs, adding PEI, garolyte or glass sheets etc. It was a great bit of kit for the money but even at the new lower price (now under $400USD and $600AUD) I've stopped recommending them because QC has gone and they are a pain to set up (takes me 2-3 hours as a pro instead of 15 mins) and they are just waiting to electrocute someone or burn their house down now.

    • "Each iteration has also reduced design in favour of cost…"

      Really? That's a bloody shame. I have noticed a lot more posts on the facebook group lately about various issues from brand new owners but just figured it was a case of few bad apples/people makes only making posts when there's issues. I guess I shouldn't recommend it any more too.

      What would you say is the best printer FDM printer under $1000 now? Do you have any experience with the Two Trees Sapphire S, I like the corexy design but being closed source is a deal breaker.

      • @la838 That’s tricky. These are still decent value BUT the are not as new user ready out of the box. I built up another this week and had to redo every vwheel as they’d not assembled it within the range of adjustment. The heated bed was only effectively heated for the middle 180x180mm due to something they’ve change in the silicone heater. Once up and running it is almost as good as earlier models (with the except of the cold cornered bed). There’s not enough Sapphire S in the wild to comment. Lots of printer companies produce immaculate first releases then the quality plummets with the mass produced models. As I have experience and I’m not afraid to upgrade I’d buy Tronxy X5S. They drop to $270 on eBay and with a few quick upgrades (readily downloaded and printed from thingiverse) you have good printer. Spend $120 on a new PSU and control board and you have a great CoreXY printer. For a bit more and ready to run, wait for the Ender 5 Plus. That looks to have everything in the right place for a great printer, early reviews are good and Creality has a reasonable rep in the consistency of product at that price point.

        • Damn that sounded like a nightmare. I have a Guider 2 but I moved recently and don't have garage anymore and is just too damn loud to run while I'm in the same room. I'm not a big fan of Prusa designs either so might look into the Tronxy & change the board like you suggested.

  • FYI use code BG359X1
    Drops it to 359.99 USD + GST = 395.99 USD

    This is also a competitor for the CR-10S Pro
    https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/469177
    Which can be had for $711.08 AUD with PILOT20

    Each have their pro's and con's
    with either it seems that you are gambling on if you get a good one or one that you have to completely rebuild. The fans on the CR-10S Pro are stupid loud tho so if your planning to be in the same room as it for a while plan on a fan upgrade.

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