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ELEGOO Resin 3D Printer Mars 2 Pro Mono MSLA 3D Printer UV Photocuring LCD Resin 3D Printer with 6.08 inch 2K Monochrome LCD, Printing Size 129 x 80 x 160 mm³ / 5.1 x 3.1 x 6.3 in³

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Size: Mars 2 Pro


Features

  • Fast Printing and less maintenanceMars 2 Pro comes with a 6.08 inch monochrome LCD of 2K HD resolution and only takes 2 seconds per layer exposure to cure resin, which could significantly enhance your printing efficiency. Mono LCD has a much longer lifespan and stable performance during long term printing, thus saves your cost.
  • Outstanding prints and ultra accuracyBrand new light source structure provides more even UV light emission and working together with 2K mono LCD, the printing details and precision are greatly improved and the 3D printed models are fascinating.
  • Sturdy build qualityCNC machined aluminum body makes Mars 2 Pro a very formidable machine. Newly-designed sandblasted build plate has a much stronger adherence during printing and enables consistent printing success. Built-in active carbon could absorb the fume of resin and offer you a refreshing printing experience.
  • Multi language interfaceMars 2 Pro now supports 12 kinds of languages so customers across the world could operate the 3D printer more conveniently without barriers. The newly added 10 languages are Japanese, Dutch, Korean, French, German, Russian, Italian, Spanish, Turkish and Portuguese.
  • Warranty and ServiceWe provide a 1-year warranty on the whole printer and 6-month warranty for the 2K LCD (FEP film is excluded). Mars 2 Pro comes with 2 extra FEP films for you to replace the original one if needed.

Product Dimensions: 22.44 x 11.42 x 11.42 inches


Item Weight: 13.67 pounds


Item model number: MARS 2 Pro


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: October 11, 2020


Manufacturer: ELEGOO


Country of Origin: China


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • A bit of a rocky road, but worth it. Incredibly detailed and precise prints result!
Size: Mars 2 Pro
When the Mars 2 Pro works, it boy does it ever do a great job! Expect failed prints, but when it works, the prints are amazing! There is a learning curve. You have to learn to follow their (sometimes shaky) instructions precisely. If you do, look at my picture. This what the printer can do, and it is amazing! Follow the instructions. Yes, they read like a Japanese stereo manual. They are a Japanese company, after all. They do have a library of videos to help you with problems. Part of the learning curve. Clean up after every print. Buy a few gallons of anhydrous alcohol (99% or better, available on Amazon, of course) for cleanup. REUSE YOUR ALCOHOL! Put it in a clear jar and leave it in the sun a day or two, or buy a curing chamber and do it the convenient (and slow) way. The printer died after 2 months. I had a rocky start with Support. The LCD died. When I replaced it (following their video exactly) after a few tries the new LCD works perfectly. There were other problems. Support tonight informed me they are shipping a replacement printer. I was using the printer to print fabulous items like pictures for my family. With the new printer I can finish printing them. Look at the three eggs in the picture. I printed 6 eggs on one build plate and the vehicles that fit into the eggs on another build plate. Three are pictured. They are TINY. The wheels turn. The ladder and backhoe arm are articulated, and they work! And every one fits precisely into their egg with literally no room to spare. That is just amazing. The tiny elf village, villainously painted by me, is intricate and superbly detailed. The Go Away Gnome, printed 2 to a build plate, will be great gag gifts for family and friends. The deer, poorly lit, are for my hunting friends, a guaranteed hit. The quality of the prints is obvious. The painting, well... Never tried it before. It shows. I found a few million printable objects on Thingiverse, my salvation since I don't know how to create things. I downloaded several hundred for christmas including everything in the picture. Load the STL file into Chitubox, load up the build plate with as many things as possible, then slice and save it and you're almost guaranteed a great print - most of the time. There is the aforementioned learning curve. Sometimes everything but a couple items print. I have not figured out why some items don't materialize. The Harry Potter chess set had 15 pieces on one build plate. 13 printed. Go figure. The machine is built like a Sherman Tank. Heavy. Solid. Getting inside to replace the LCD was a bit of a pain. However, if you precisely follow their instructions and pause the video at every step, it is still a pain, but it is very doable. Just be patient. REALLY patient! The Achilles' heel is the FTP, in my humble opinion. The ones that come installed on the tanks work great. They have play in them. So far I've wasted 7 FEP sheets trying to reproduce their results. HEY ELEGOO! SELL US YOUR FOAM PAD!!! PLEASE!!! THAT is the Achilles' heel. I have found it impossible to get the FEP right using their video and my approximations of the pad they use to make sure the FEP has play in it. Here's how this thing works: The build plate descends to a tiny fraction of an inch above the FEP, which lays flat on the LCD. A thin thin layer of resin remains between the build plate and the FEP. The UV light turns on for a programmed length of time. Then the build plate rises. IF YOUR FEP IS RIGHT, the printed layer is peeled up from the REP from the outside edge to the center of the print. If it ain't right, the sucker sticks TIGHT to the FEP, pulls off of the build plate instead, and you print a slug of resin in the rough outline of what you thought you were printing! Moral of the story? FEP RULES. Good FEP = Excellent prints. BAD FEP and you are sunk. I have so far bought two sets of two spare tanks so I at least have something that works. I truly hope they will sell their sponge pad because I can't afford to keep paying 25 bucks apiece for new tanks just to get working FEP. Argh squared and cubed! Here are the Pros: The Mars 2 Pro -CAN- product absolutely stunning 3D prints. It is a pretty machine. Really. It is SOLIDLY built. They provide everything you need with the printer (except the resin). Their resin works well. And the Cons: The printer is a bit tempermental. The documentation is written by the same guys that write Japanese stereo manuals. Prints -will- fail. There is as much art as there is practice in producing prints. Setup is a real pain. Full setup is required for EVERY print., a huge pain, but NECESSARY. Fill those build plates! Save LCD cycles! Cleanup is another real pain. Wear gloves. The resin is toxic. Clean up WELL. It matters. You have to do the full cleanup after every print. Elegoo Tech Support is super sparing on words. English isn't their language. Be patient. And the resin... Unlike FDM filament, the color pickings are slim. They ain't many, period. I have bought an acrylic dye kit. I will be experimenting with dyeing the white resin. One thing is for sure, you print in one color. Only. On that issue, FDM has resin printers beat, but the quality of the produced models is SO MUCH BETTER THAN FDM'S BEST that there just is no contest. The short of it? GREAT 3D prints ARE possible, even for neophytes like me. The devil is in the details. FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS PRECISELY. Every time. I am very impressed with the performance and quality of this printer, and even more impressed with the gifts I made. I know they will be appreciated! And don't forget Thingiverse. What a wonderful FREE source for printable objects! Try it out. You will amaze your friends and family. Even more if you can paint worth a durn! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2021 by Grambo Grambo

  • Becoming a Believer in Elegoo
Size: Mars 3 Pro
I am a former Anycubic loyalist, having just recently had a mishap that resulted in liquid resin leaking everywhere (entirely my own fault) and the Photon Mono 4K being put into the garage until I can disassemble it, fully clean it, and replaced the LCD (hard to source 4K Anycubic parts, unfortunately). When I noticed an Amazon Lightning Deal on the Mars 3 Pro for a rather deep discount and I decided to go for it. I am an avid Bolt Action miniatures wargamer being able to print spares, upgrades, and models that either aren't offered in the market or are prohibitively expensive, is important to me. Software and touch screen - The touch screen is NOT the best, but this is not a flagship smartphone we're talking about here. It is functional and "good enough." I also *really* like that the firmware supports folders on the USB drive. This allows me to separate my CTB files (more on Chitubox in a moment) into subjects, e.g., Bolt Action, Warhammer, Utility prints, etc. On the Anycubic I had to dump everything into the disk root and scroll through a massive list of files every time I wanted to do a print. Slicing software - I used Photon Workshop for my Anycubic resin printers from the start, going back to 2019 at this point. I was very used to that software and I wasn't overjoyed at having to switch to ChituBox, which I had previously tried and failed to love. But I don't really understand why, because within 30 minutes of using it for the Mars 3 Pro, I got the hang of it, and it does quite a few things much better than Photon Workshop (auto-supports are MUCH better, for starters). It is easy to rotate, move, and scale models. Printer - build quality seems good. No rattle-y, flimsy parts noticed so far. The power brick includes an extension cable (3', I believe) which is very nice (Anycubic was a massive wall wart with the prongs built-in so I had to supply my own 1' extension cable). The air filter is a NICE touch! I was skeptical at first. A literal brick of charcoal in a plastic enclosure with a USB-powered fan? But it actually seems to help with the odor! I am not particularly sensitive to smells, but I notice a difference. The dedicated USB port on the top of the printer for the air filter is also very nice. Print quality - right out of the box, I leveled the build plate (the included instructions miss a step but a quick search had me back on track), tightened the Allen bolts, and printed a Bolt Action model that I was missing from the previous Anycubic catastrophic failure (wheels and axles for a truck - I tried printing them with FDM and it came out awful). Absolutely no problems, and I did not even use supports, I just adhered the flat bottoms of the wheels and axles directly to the nicely-textured build plate. However, because they were stuck to the build plate, I made the mistake of using the metal putty knife to dislodge them. It immediately scraped off the texture of the plate (just a small area and I have subsequently done successful prints). So beware of that! Only use plastic tools on your build plate! With the Anycubic it was not sandblasted, it was just a brushed aluminum texture, so I used a metal blade with it all the time with no ill effects. If you do damage your Mars 3 Pro build plate, replacements are available on Amazon for less than $25 at time of writing this. Overall, I'm very pleased with Elegoo here! My neighbor has a Saturn, and he had a Mars 2 before that, and had a lot of problems. But as I get to know him better, it is clear that he is not very technically inclined. So I am not ready to blame Elegoo for his issues, frankly. In a nutshell (bit late for that haha!), I am surprised by how much I like the Elegoo Mars 3 Pro after having been a satisfied Anycubic (and only Anycubic) customer for the last 3 years (Photon S, Photon Mono 4K, Mega S, Vyper). But now I am planning to go for a Saturn S next instead of the Photon M3 Max. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2022 by Casey H.

  • Great, when it works without issues.
Size: Mars 3
*EDIT: See bottom for the edit. Im on my second one after sending the first one back, I really want to love this printer that much. As a first time printer, let me tell you, do NOT just go into this hooking it up and trying to use it. You need to research proper ways to setup and use, plus knowing what to do/not to do with your build plate and FEP. But I wanted to let Elegoo see something first, a major build flaw. In my pic you can see two tiny screw holes, one on each side, where the screw goes down to hold your resin tank. Those are almost flush with the print screen. The reason I sent the last one back, is that after some use, my build plate starting going down too far, ruptured the plastic resin tank, spilling resin on the LCD screen, which then got hardened. This can be cleaned off, but because those screw holes are so close and shallow, the resin flowed into the left one making it impossible to get the screw out or put back in, effectively ruining the printer. Those holes need to have an elevated lip and recesses INTO the bottom of the tank, ABOVE the plastic liner for the resin tank. EDIT: Elegoo reached out to me personally which was amazing and did everything they could to help out. Their customer service has been some of the best I've experienced in years. This second printer is working like a charm and I've had zero issues. I still highly recommend it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2023 by Joshua Jordan Joshua Jordan

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