Our FDM 3D printers use fused deposition modeling technology to produce durable and high-quality parts. Ideal for prototyping, education, and hobbyist projects, they offer user-friendly operation and consistent performance.
Open Material Compatibility & Versatile Dual Extrusion
Industrial-Grade Reliability for Unattended Printing
Complete Ecosystem & User-Friendly Operation
Bambu Lab X2D 3D Printer
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Regular price
$649.00 - $899.00
Sale price
$649.00 - $899.00
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Vendor:
Bambu Lab
Bambu Lab X2D 3D Printer
Dual-Nozzle 3D Printing
Faster Multi-Color Printing
300 °C Nozzle & 65 °C Active Chamber Heating
Bambu Lab A2L 3D Printer
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Regular price
$469.00 - $569.00
Sale price
$469.00 - $569.00
Regular price
Unit price
/ per
Vendor:
Bambu Lab
Bambu Lab A2L 3D Printer
Expanded Build Volume
Multi-Tool Ecosystem
Full-Auto Calibration
FAQS
What is the main difference between FDM and Resin 3D printers?
FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling) printers build objects by melting and extruding thermoplastic filament layer by layer, while Resin printers (SLA/DLP/LCD) use liquid photopolymer resin cured by UV light to form layers.
In short, FDM = melted plastic, Resin = UV-cured liquid.
Which one offers better print quality?
Resin 3D printers deliver significantly higher resolution and finer التفاصيل, making them ideal for miniatures, jewelry, and dental models.
FDM printers produce visible layer lines and are better suited for functional parts rather than ultra-detailed models.
Which is better for beginners?
FDM printers are generally more beginner-friendly due to:
Easier setup and operation
Lower maintenance
No need for post-processing with chemicals
Resin printers require more handling steps, like washing and curing, which can be less convenient for beginners.
What materials do they use?
FDM printers use solid filaments such as PLA, PETG, ABS, TPU
Resin printers use liquid photopolymer resins (standard, tough, flexible, castable, etc.)
Material choice depends on your application—strength vs detail.
What about print speed?
FDM printers print layer by layer, so speed depends on model size and complexity.
Resin printers cure entire layers at once, making them faster for highly detailed or batch prints.
Which one should I choose?
Choose FDM if you want:
Affordable printing
Ease of use
Strong, functional parts
Choose Resin if you want:
Ultra-high detail
Smooth surface finish
Professional-grade small models