Today from the floor of Euromold 2013 3D Systems announced five new 3D printers. We’re most excited about the desktop-ready ProJet 1200 Micro-SLA Professional 3D Printer. Retailing at $4,900, it is a bit more expensive than the Form 1 ($3,299) or B9 Creator ($3,375), but the ProJet 1200 features a new, one-step process that uses an all-in-one cartridge and curing cell, with all post processing done inside the printer.
The ProJet 1200 Micro-SLA in Action
According to 3D Systems, the ProJet 1200 is extremely fast (capable of printing 12 dental waxes or 5 rings in 1/2 hour to hour) and smaller than the average coffee maker.
3D Systems also announced four other Industrial / Professional 3D Printers. No prices mentioned yet, but they are “ready for the factory floor.” The ProJet 4500 Professional 3D Printer, which prints in full color plastic. The ProJet 5500X Engineered composite materials 3D printer a large multi-material printer capable of printing fully functional objects with moving parts (like a plastic race car with rubber tires) in a single build. The ProX 950 Production SLA Printer, which has the largest format production platform, was used to print a working drum set that was played during the announcement and the ProX 500 Production SLS Printer plastic printer. There was also a announcement that Geomagic Capture will be integrated into a “Geomagic Print” driver to optimize model placement for printing, fix problematic models, and allow users to assign properties at both the pixel and layer level.
Watch the Full Announcement
4 thoughts on “3D Systems Announces the $4,900 ProJet 1200 Micro-SLA”
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It looks very nice, and the price isn’t too unreasonable for a machine that is supposed to be at least close to plug-and-play, but what I really wonder about is how much they’ll charge for the special “ink” cartridges. Pro machines already have a bad reputation for ripping people off on the price-per-cm of plastic filament in their DRM controlled proprietary cartridges. When a company from the same industry that traditionally charged $50,000+ for a base model printer starts offering something under $5,000 I start to wonder what kind of astronomical inkjet-printer-style mark-up they may be planning on locking all their customers into…
@COLECOMAN1982, true – the real cost of a machine is often in the consumables. 3D Systems is calling it a “professional” printer, and it is possible “all in one” finishing may mean expensive materials costs. They haven’t announced any pricing on the materials for the ProJet 1200 just yet, so we will have to wait and see.
Watch the Full Announcement?
The “Full Announcement” is not as full as I’d like.
If all that was needed is someone telling us how wonderful the machine is, the video would be complete.
It’s missing simple details like the print size and material and machine pricing.