Raise3D Raise3D Printer Cart for Pro3 Plus & Pro2 Plus
This sturdy, durable and stylish printer cart is the answer to the question of how to make the Raise3D Pro3 Plus or Pro2 Plus 3D Printer an even more perfect for industrial, educational or hobbyist printing. Place your Pro2 Plus on this perfectly sized cart to raise your printer to the optimal work height, then use the locking wheels to set up your print space exactly the way you need it.
The cart also features a smoothly sliding drawer with places to keep all the right tools for 3D printing, and shelves that keep spools of filament neatly organized. Everything you need, exactly where you need it.
SHIPPING NOTICE
Please note that due to the size and packaging of this machine, your item will ship on a pallet via freight, which could extend delivery times. If you are shipping to a residential address, the freight company will call you to schedule a delivery. Shipments made to commercial addresses will be made without the need to schedule a delivery.
List Price: | $1,199.00 |
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Price: | $1,199.00 |
Price: | $... |
Availability: | In Stock |
Order Now: | Ships Tomorrow Ships via Freight |
Keep It Secret, Keep It Safe
Printer carts are excellent for organizing and maintaining your printing tools and materials, and this cart is one of the best at doing exactly that. Every tool and spool has a perfectly sized home, all tucked away beneath your 3D printer. But one of the best features of the Raise3D Printer Cart is that all those items can be hidden away by pulling down the roll-top style front panel. In one smooth movement, your collection of printing accoutrement is out of site and out of mind.
With any kind of manufacturing, it can be a challenge to avoid clutter and maintain a tidy work space, but with the elegant front panel, your printing area will maintain its organized look and feel, and allow you to focus on what's important: printing!
Tech Specs
Width: 24.5” (622.3mm)
Depth: 23.25” (590.6mm)
Height: 25" (635mm)
Weight: 58 lbs.
Materials: Aluminum Composite Panel, High Density Polythylene, HDPE
Questions
What is the difference between the MH PRO series TPU and the MH Build Series TPU?
I have had generally good luck with this material. I love the properties of it. I would like some advice on reducing some stringing. I use Prusa MK3S with the Generic FLEX setting. I get a big string from the purge line to the skirt and from the skirt to the print. I am using a 240 degree print temp and my speeds are all around 30.
Is this designed to be printed in a machine with a bowden extruder?
I ordered this material (Matter Hackers Pro Series, 1.75mm, TPU, Gray) for my Bambu Lab X1E printer. When I tried to load it into the AMS, it failed and got stuck. I needed to disassemble the filament tubing to get it unstuck. Is there something that could be done to use this material with the Bambu Lab X1E printer? Perhaps mounting it to the rear spool instead if in the AMS...? Do you have any experience with this material for this printer? Thank you. Brian Wixom brianwixom@gmail.com
I discovered that Metthackers pro clear TPU is easy to break, while the cheap inland white TPU is nearly impossible to break. So I don't get it, the NylonX is major strong and I use it as the backbone of everything, but I don't understand how a cheap filament, precisely inland white TPU, outperforms mettahackers pro series in utility function. It prints better, but I can make the cheap stuff print near perfect with extra attention to settings. So I ask, whats really up with mettahackers TPU, it concerns me because I was going to invest in Mettahackers Nylon and now I am in doubt. I simply want to know why the cheap stuff was way beter than mettahackers pro series?? Please.
Can this be used as a base, with a layer change/stop and then PLA printed on top of it? I want a flexible bottom to a specific print, but I don't want the entire print flexible...
What's the shore hardness?
What are temperature limits for printed parts?
How well do TPU printed objects hold up against gasoline and oils? Thinking about making an intake boot? I'd like it to hold around 100 psi. any recommendations?
What is the chemical resistance to water rating?
What is the Light Transmittance Rating of this material? This is a commonly reported property, usually expressed as % of total light transmittance. 100% = perfect clarity, all light crosses through 0% = perfect opacity, no light crosses through.
Where is the Safety Data Sheet?
1.7mm as delivered, which made it very prone to kinking. Not printable with the EZR Struder on an Ender 3, with any temperature or nozzle. 1.8mm & above seems necessary with flexible filament. Thicker is better because it needs to transfer force to the nozzle. It might work with a dual drive direct extruder with real tight passages.
What is the Young's modulus of the material
What is the moisture level it ships with?
The TDS says "Print Temp 230C +/-10" and "Bed Temp 70C +/-10". The images on this web page say "Hot End Temp 250C +/-10" and "Bed Temp 50C +/-10". Is this inconsistency a hallmark of the MH PRO series TPU???