Home3D PrintingFinally an affordable printing? Creality Ender 3 3D Printer

Finally an affordable printing? Creality Ender 3 3D Printer

There are many 3D printers, but this one is mine!

To say I’m stoked for my first printer, is an understatement. I’m an impatient person, and I had to wait for the Creality Ender 3 printer since November (due to various issues, the final shipping time was about 4 -5 weeks). The printer arrived yesterday, I dropped everything and escaped to the hackspace to run a livestream of me building it. There were 150 people watching me doing so and going through the first 5h test print on and off – thanks to every one of them for tuning in!

Creality Ender 3 3D Printer

This is what everyone would consider a budget 3D printer. It will set you back at £150/$190 depending on weather conditions and current promotions. Inside the box, there is nothing that screams budget at you. The Creality Ender 3 3D Printer feels nothing but sturdy and well made. Don’t just take my word for it, it comes from someone that owns several more expensive printers already!

Frankly speaking, there was no better place to build a printer. I had the Teesside Hackspace to myself, then Jim (Hackspace CEO or like he rather call it “trustee”) popped in to oversee the operations, poke fun at me and give me heaps of advice leveling this thing out! But you know what?

You can totally build this on your own

Mat – NotEnoughTech

I had no previous experience in assembling anything like that. The Creality Ender 3 3D Printer comes partially assembled, neatly packed bundled with IKEA style manual. If you reserve 2-3hours, you will be able to put it together yourself. There is no need to Hackspace as tools are included and if you read this piece, all the “Jim’s words of wisdom” will guide you through the levelling process and the first print.

Buy Creality Ender 3

Buy it using these links to support NotEnoughTech.

Building the Creality Ender 3 3D Printer

When you embark on the journey like that, get enough space, space out all the parts and identify it. It’s super sismple once you are aware where everything is and where the parts are. Instructions are straight forward and apart from one step I never got confused.

The package contains all the tools you need, and these aren’t your tragic “I don’t want to use it” IKEA sets. A cheap but apt allen keys and wrenches will get you going in no time, without the feel that you need to dig out more professional sets.

The printer is made mostly of metal. It’s the biggest surprise, even the panel covering the display was made from a solid chunk of metal. Literally, the only plastic part was the reel axis (the holder’s arm is metal as well). Call me impressed. Cables has been also wrapped and partially managed, to all you have to do is to add a zip tie here and there to finish it off.

During the entire build process, I had one thought – it doesn’t matter how it looks (ok it matters a little), as long as it prints ok. At this price point, I had serious concerns. I have had bad runs with the Hackspace printers, and these were sub $400-500 models.

Leveling Creality Ender 3 3D Printer

The leveling assures that at no point the printhead nozzle is too far away from the print bed. Incorrect spacing can lead to failed prints. Take your time and follow this simple guidance.

  • 1. Set the Z-axis stop carefully. Use the printer menu to lower the extruder enough to get close to the print bed, but not too far to avoid pushing the bed down. You can move the Z-axis by mm – so take your time to make sure the extruder won’t go out of bounds and damage the printer.
  • 2. Find even surface. You should not use gravity to level the bed. If your printer is not parallel to the ground, it won’t work. You can use the water level as a rough guide, but the print bed has to be parallel to the extruder.
  • 3. Level 4 corners. Find a piece of paper and lay it on the print bed. Home the extruder and adjust the position of the print bed in each corner. Do not change the Z axis, just probe the distance between the extruder and different points of the bed. Imagine a square where each corner is based near the print bed adjustment screws. Then measure the distance along the edges.
  • 4. Keep a nice distance. The distance between the extruder and the print bed should be set at extruder in home position on the Z-axis and should be enough to move the paper sheet around. You should feel a small amount of friction as you move the paper around, but make sure the paper has no visible marks from the extruder.

Follow these steps and you should have no problems with your 1st print.

Creality Ender 3 3D Printer – Prints

My test print lasted 5h. It was a test g-code included with the printer. I have not modified any settings at all. Just put the file in and run it off the microSD card. I’d assume these were the default settings. Plenty of space to fine tune it.

The print bed temperature has been consistant across the surface (measured with an infrared thermometer) and none of the components were warm during the 5h print. The power supply, connectors and the motor driver enclosures reported back near room like temperatures.

I run out of the filament before the test print could be completed. While the firmware version has no options to change the filament mid-print, I was able to pause the print, preheat the extruder and complete the filament change. As you can see on the picture, the print has resumed flawlessly with the new filament.

The print was excellent for how much the printer costs. The printer was moving quickly between parts, the Endie (aptly named by me test dog figure) had overhang edges, support material and curves. Plenty of surfaces to examine the quality of the print.

It’s much easier to work with, with better print qualities

Jim -Teeside Hackspace

Both I and Jim were VERY impressed by what this printer is capable of. Just take a look for yourself.

Buy Creality Ender 3

Buy it using these links to support NotEnoughTech.

End-er Thoughts

Creality Ender 3 3D Printer comes with a low price, that often can seem as too good to be true. This was my line of thinking after bumping into quality issues with more expensive and featured models. It may not have dual extrusion, automatic bed levelling and other fancy features, but it runs quietly and offers what every entry-level product should: ease of use. It’s a great machine to get you started, to have as a 2nd printer or keep you going until you figure out your upgrade path. It’s here to stay for sure. Join the discussion on Reddit.

Disclaimer

This product has been sponsored by Banggood.com, but I reserve the rights to a honest and unbiased opinion about the product.

Sponsored byreview

client-image

Other reviews

Dashcam and driving instructor in one: 70mai A810

0
I have upgraded my dashcam and this one comes with a couple of fun tricks. Watch this if you care about the safety of your car and the peace of mind remote access gives you

We’ve seen this before: SwitchBot K10+ PRO

0
This is an odd one. Building on the success of SwitchBot K10+ they released SwitchBot K10+ PRO - but is the experience actually better?

Ultimea Nova C40 sets the standards for budget projectors

0
It's hard to get excited about a gadget that comes with a "budget" tag. Ultimea Nova C40 puts excitement into inexpensive projectors and you should watch this if you are picking a projector in 2024

A keyboard for life! GravaStar Mercury K1

0
After the release of GravaStar Mercury M2 mouse, it was time to see the keyboard from GravaStar. And oh boy I'm happy to own one!

These three features of AIcoco onAir are great!

0
I'm trying out a new streaming camera for YouTube, Twitch and other services. This is Aicoco onAir - should you get one?

SwitchBot S10: cleaning re-imagined!

0
SwitchBot S10 promises unattended vacuuming and mopping so you can focus on things you love and care for. Does it deliver?

Sleek cable management: KYY X90A

0
Screen estate is a productivity king! KYY X90A comes with 14" panels and internal routing for a sleek look. Are they as good as they look?