Anycubic promises its Kobra X high-speed multi-filament printer can print over twice as fast and with half the material for $259 — redesigned head keeps the cutter close to the nozzle
That's quite the promise for only $259 for early adopters.
Bambu, Prusa, and Creality are the usual household names in the 3D printing world, but there's no shortage of alternative makers trying to upset the status quo. Anycubic just announced the Kobra X, an affordable multi-filament, multi-material 3D printer that the company claims can print twice as fast while spending half the material of its competitors — all for just $259 for early birds who preorder the machine.
The Kobra X's main claim to fame is its purge reduction system. By reducing the distance between the cutter and the nozzle by half and bringing the retraction distance down from 160mm to 30mm (compared to the extant Kobra 3 v2), the system can theoretically print two to three times as fast and with just half the material. This comes by way of the head spending far less time "pooping" and more time printing.
Those claims seem plausible for elaborate, multi-filament prints, though we'd expect simpler, one-filament creations to have comparable speed to its direct competitors, as the maximum head speed is 600mm/s. The printer is capable of handling multimaterial prints, like mixing PLA and TPU, or PLA and PVA.
Anycubic really went for the multi-filament crown, as the included automatic feeder can carry four rolls, and up to four extra feeders can be wired up for a total of 19 available filaments. That looks impressive for a printer in this price bracket already, but Anycubic goes further and claims that its camera-enabled spaghetti and foreign object detection system can skip failed parts entirely while keeping the rest of the print going.
Additional niceties including auto resuming prints in the event of a power outage, automatic calibration according to flow and vibration, and even bed heat distribution. Should all of these features pan out as predicted, the Kobra X would have a leg or two up the Bambu A1 and similar models. The print volume is 260 mm³.
Anycubic is releasing the Kobra X in a staged preorder campaign. Interested buyers who pony up a $10 deposit can knocks $30 off the final price. That's in addition to the staged three pricing tiers:
- January 15 to February 28: $259, or $279 without a deposit.
- March 1 to March 31: $279, or $299 without a deposit.
- Afterwards: $399.
Preorders placed until March 31st also get 50% off a four-pack of filament rolls, and $50 off an accessory bundle. 3D printers have massively come down in price and improved in reliability these past few years, so we're only happy to see one more competitor on the field. Thankfully, printers are far less likely to be affected by DDR5 pricing shenanigans, so the price drops should continue.
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Bruno Ferreira is a contributing writer for Tom's Hardware. He has decades of experience with PC hardware and assorted sundries, alongside a career as a developer. He's obsessed with detail and has a tendency to ramble on the topics he loves. When not doing that, he's usually playing games, or at live music shows and festivals.