Featured image of Anycubic Shows Two New 3D Printers at Formnext Source: All3DP
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Kobra, Hi!

Anycubic Shows Two New 3D Printers at Formnext

Picture ofMatthew Mensley
by Matthew Mensley
Published Nov 20, 2024

Multicolor 3D printing goes bigger and faster for Anycubic with the Kobra 3 Max and Kobra S1 3D printers.

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Following the 2024 launch of its first multicolor filament changer, the ACE Pro, Anycubic is forging ahead with diverse form factors to take advantage of the system.

At Formnext we’ve seen the Kobra 3 Max, a typical scaling up of Anycubic’s base Kobra 3 design that packs a 420 x 420 x 500 mm build volume. Other talking points include what Anycubic says is a new hot end structure, an AC-powered heatbed, and, as with the base Kobra 3 model, support for up to eight filaments via two ACE Pro units. Mind that we’ve yet to see official hardware support for eight-color printing, only community solutions the company puts at arm’s length that you “use at your own risk”. The new hot end is described as “ceramic,” and is not the same hardware that ships with the base Kobra 3 3D printer.

As with the Kobra 3, the Kobra 3 Max will be available bundled with the ACE Pro as the Kobra 3 Combo.

The Anycubic Kobra S1 combo CoreXY 3D printer (Source: All3DP)

Anycubic’s highlight of the show is the Kobra S1 – a fully enclosed CoreXY model that offers print speeds up to 600mm/s. Also compatible with the ACE Pro, printing with up to eight filaments using two devices is possible. While no figures have been released, we’re told the print volume runs to approximately a centimeter or so taller than the Kobra 3 – that’d mean 250 x 250 mm build area and slightly more than the Kobra 3’s 260 mm build height.

Cross-compatibility of the devices is maintained across the Kobra 3 and S1 lineup, meaning you can take an ACE Pro from a Kobra 3 Combo and use it with the Kobra S1 and vice versa.

Placards on the booth say “soon,” but we should expect the new printers to launch by the early new year, at the latest. Price TBD but, as with most of Anycubic’s lineup, they will be competitive.

Read more from Formnext 2024:

Prusa Surprise Launches Enclosed CoreXY 3D Printer, MK4S Users Can Upgrade
Elegoo Unveils New 'SatelLite' Slicer for Beginner Users, Coming Soon
Nano Dimension Unveils New, Bigger Micro 3D Printer at Formnext

About the Author:
Matthew Mensley is a senior editor at All3DP with nine years covering consumer 3D printing hardware. He writes news, reviews, and buying guides with the clarity of someone who's seen enough hype cycles to know which ones to take seriously.
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