The from Amsterdam, global 3D Hubs used his knowledge about thousands of connected professional and home-garden-and-kitchen-3d-printers to a buying guide for printers. It is the second time that the social 3d-print network does this.
The team of 3D Hubs made use of reviews of 5350 owners of home 3d printers that a total of 441 different printers through the mangle shrugged. The number of printed models by these printers is for this ‘Best 3D Printer Guide’ on 714.300 printables, good for 3962 years of printing.
To the guide to put together, looked to the users to print quality, ease of use, build quality, reliability, failure rate, customer service, community around the printer, running costs, software and value. The distribution that resulted, was further split into different categories: Enthusiast, Plug’n’play, Kit/DIY, Budget and Resin.
The assessee printers had at least twenty reviews of experienced 3D Hubbers. An overview of all the 126 models with five reviews or more is also on the site. A year ago, was almost half the printers in the list: 67. In the reviews there is no use made of the responses of customers who prints ordered via 3D Hubs, all who are on the site to find the ‘trends’ on the site.