The MakerGear M2
The MakerGear M2
First and foremost, this is a solid machine - other than a few token
printed parts, it's pretty much all metal. Welded stainless frame,
real-deal linear rails, aluminum plate, etc etc. There's no sign of
wood or all-thread anywhere. Very well built!
I am used to larger
metalworking machinery, so especially a year ago, I was not impressed
with the vast majority of the machines on the market. I honestly can't
remember the last time I had to adjust anything, even leveling the bed.
Point blank, *if* you can find a better built machine, you'll be
spending several hundred dollars more, if not thousands. I assumed that
after some time something better would have hit the market, but if I
were to buy another FDM machine today, I would still go with the M2.
I
build and race cars, and my day job is in aviation manufacturing; I've
got a pretty good handle on hardware I guess you could say. :) There
are some things I would have done differently as far as design and
material selection, but at the end of the day, nothing has turned out to
be an issue after a year of use so I can't knock it.
Second, I
have found the support to be amongst the best I have experienced,
anywhere, period. Being a small company, I was worried they would be
buried trying to get these things out to customers and would have to
slack off on support, but that has not been the case at all. If I had
an issue, I had a response to my emails within hours, if not minutes.
If something was wrong, they fixed it immediately, no fuss or dancing
around (I had an early unit with a few hiccups, and I was honestly
expecting a few since this was a new machine to the market; not even
aircraft are immune to these sort of things).
Third, print
quality is great! I've designed things and printed them on our $$$
Stratasys machines at work. Just for kicks, I printed something on my
M2 and then printed the same file on our professional machines. I would
say you get about 90% of the quality for less, or even much less, than
10% of the cost. And at least on the particular 'thing' I made, the M2
was faster as well. And the print window is rather generous at around
8x10x10" - don't forget to take that in to consideration when you are
shopping around!
I was originally going to give 4/5 stars, but
between things they have revised over the past year and this being a
pre-assembled machine, anything I could really gripe about is no longer
an issue. If you combine this with the Simplify 3D 'Creator' software,
it's also pretty darn easy to use (the freeware also works very well,
but is slower and a bit clunky). This is about as close to a "plug and
play, set and forget" machine as you're going to get on the hobbyist
market at anywhere near this price point.
The MakerGear M2
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