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Official Creality Ender 5 Pro 3D Printer Upgrade Silent Mother Board Metal Feeder Extruder and Capricorn Bowden PTFE Tubing 220 x 220 x 300mm Build Volume

  • Based on 1,129 reviews
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Features

  • Upgraded Silent Mainboard V4.2.2: Ender 5 Pro 3d printer comes with upgraded V4.2.2 silent Mainboard with TMC2208 drivers, allowing for quieter and more precise printing performance.
  • Metal Extruder Kit: Ender 5 Pro adopts Creality metal extruder which has better stronger pressure to pushing filament into printer nozzle, improving the printer's performance.
  • Capricorn Premium XS Bowden Tubing: Imported Capricorn blue tube with high temperature resistant makes feeding smoother and ensure great printing texture.
  • Brand Power Supply: Built-in brand power supply, heat up the hot bed to 110 in 5 minutes.
  • Semi-Assembled Kits: Ender 5 Pro comes with several partially assembled kits, very easy to assemble and allow you to learn about the basic construction of 3D printer. OFFICIAL SERVICES: Comgrow team provides you lifetime technical assistance and 24 hours professional customer service.

Brand: Comgrow


Material: Metal


Color: Black


Product Dimensions: 8.66"D x 8.66"W x 11.81"H


Item Weight: 29.54 Grams


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 21.97 x 21.22 x 9.37 inches; 1.04 Ounces


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ November 20, 2018


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Creality 3D


Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ China


Best Sellers Rank: #52,083 in Industrial & Scientific (See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific) #88 in 3D Printers


#88 in 3D Printers:


Customer Reviews: 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 1,129 ratings


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Incredible value for any tinkerer
After a bunch of research, I settled on an Ender 5 for an entry level printer, and I couldn't be happier. I'm comparing it to a pair of Ultimaker printers at my office (10x the price). Honestly, out of the box, the only thing it really needed is leveling the bed and increasing the extruder steps per mm with a 5-minute test. At that point I'd say it reached about 80% of the print quality of a new Ultimaker. For a grand total of another $25 I've added a new extruder, Bowden tube and connectors, and glass bed, and printed a hard support and cable strain relief for the bed. With these and more tuning of slicer settings, I'm consistently getting incredible looking and functioning prints. The stock magnetic flexible bed is actually pretty OK, the adhesion is great, but slightly bowed down in the center and leaves a rough bottom surface. I've learned to love plain clean glass for many materials, adheres great and then floats off as soon as it cools. My only real disappointment is the stability of the bed. It is just a flat plate that screws onto another flat plate that rides on the Z-axis, so the entire bed bends like a diving board. Wish it had a few small ribs to reinforce it. It's ok for small prints but I recommend printing some support arms early. The cables are also too short to manage nicely, but some spiral wrap can tidy them a bit. Mine has a Landy power supply, which is apparently worse than the Meanwell that some are shipping with, but zero issues so far. Know what you're getting into - it's still a hobbyist printer, your mileage may vary. I'm sure there's a lottery for DOA units as well, but mine was great. The FDM process itself has limits, and most of what you're paying for in a more expensive printer is the assembly, the features, and the tuning/setup done at the factory. This is a kit printer on a tight budget, but with some TLC can easily match the much more expensive printers. I chose it because it's easy to modify and widely popular so there are tons of user-created guides and printable upgrades. It works fine as-is, but for me half the fun is getting to make it mine and push its limits. The frame and XY platform are a great design and assemble very easily. Conceptually seems much more stable than the Ender 3 design. It doesn't have the bells and whistles like auto leveling and wifi, but these can be modded in for cheap too. The stock board/drivers are a little noisy, the silent upgrade are worth considering if it's in your living space. Do a little research on "things I wish I knew for my first 3D printer" and essential tools and printable upgrades, there is a great community around the 3D printing and Creality world. Many Ender 3 mods work for the Ender 5 as well. There are a number of Ender 5 issues you'll see around the internet that have already been fixed by the time I got mine in Nov-2019. An early unboxing video pointed out some issues caused by backwards parts in preassembled sections, but my version has reversible parts so the issue can't happen. The extruder now has a small brass insert where the filament spool feeds in so it doesn't wear down. The firmware on mine has thermal runaway protection enabled. I tested mine with every method I could find, and it always shut down safely within 60 seconds. Research and test this on yours before you ever consider printing unattended! If you're considering the Ender 3 vs Ender 5, I would lean toward the 5. The box frame design seems much more stable, and the wobbly bed can easily be stabilized. It came with 200g of white filament, an extra nozzle, clips that slightly improved the Bowden tube stability, a micro-SD card and USB reader, a spatula to help remove prints, a nipper/flush cutter that is good for trimming tube, filament, and excess material on prints, and a small set of tools that are enough to assemble and adjust everything. Didn't include a mini-USB cable (old trapezoid, not the usual cell phone kind. You can print from SD without it but need it if you want to tinker with the firmware). If you're on the fence, get one! The correct number of 3D printers to own is always N+1. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2019 by John

  • Make sure you get it set up before the return window closes...
I purchased this Ender 5 on a whim back in July 2019. I was looking forward to using it right away but right after I received it central Wisconsin got hit with several tornadoes that knocked out the power for the better part of a week. (If you've seen the aftermath of a bunch of tornadoes you'd know how much cleanup there is for the next several weeks...) That being said I put my 3D printing ambitions on the back burner for a while to take care of more pressing matters. The unopened box sat in my hobby room the rest of the summer. Fast forward 5 months or so to Christmas time. I finally had some spare time on my hands during my Christmas vacation. I opened the box that looked like it had been dragged behind the delivery truck instead of inside. My worries were eased a bit when I saw how well the printer was packed in foam. No damage found. That being said, did you ever buy something "NEW" only to feel like something wasn't quite right when you unpacked it or started the assembly? Taking inventory as I unpacked the box I first realized that I was missing the MicroSD card and reader that was supposed to have Cura and the test STL files to start printing. I knew from countless hours of Youtube videos and forum conversations that I could go to the Creality website and just download the same files on my own card. The other missing items from the tool list were the #3 spatula, #4 pliers & #8 "spare parts" which looks like a spare nozzle and a spare coupling for the bowden tube. That might have been nice to have on hand... Moving forward I started assembling the printer while watching a step by step YouTube video. I got to the part where I was going to mount the display and the guy in the video peeled off a clear plastic screen protector from the LCD...mine didn't have one. Instead there were several smeary smudges even though it was in an anti-static bag. Not a big deal I guess. I just wiped them off. No scratches. Nothing visibly wrong. No burnt circuit board smell. Just some smudges. I mounted it and moved on. The rest of the build went pretty smooth. Connected all the wires. Found a SanDisk Class 4 8Gb MicroSD in an old HTC EVO phone and reformatted it. Downloaded and transferred the files. Went to put the card in the Ender 5 and.... now I'm not sure if everyone just assumes the card is supposed to click into place like I did, but it didn't. At all. I did some quick research on it and someone mentioned older machines used card readers that clicked into place but the newer machines don't seem to. So I put the MicroSD card into the slot until it hit a spring of some kind and left it just hanging halfway out of the front of the printer. Doesn't seem right but sometimes that's just how it is. The moment of truth at last. I've read other peoples tales of woe with powering it on to a puff of smoke and a burnt out board..... I double checked that the power supply switch was set to the correct voltage and with high hopes I powered it on. The LCD lit up bright blue. ENDER! Yay! After all this time I was finally done!...Kinda.... I leveled the bed and was ready to print the test file that I downloaded from the Creality website. I navigated to the Gcode file on the card and started the print....almost. The LCD displayed the bed temp rise to the preset of 60 degrees celsius followed by the nozzle up to 200C. Then.....nothing.....it just sat there at temp doing nothing...I thought maybe I needed to push the filament a bit to see it start oozing out the hot nozzle to make sure I didn't screw that part up. When I forced the filament I saw a string of purple plastic flow easily out the hot nozzle. The problem with that is I was using the white filament that came with the printer. So it seems as though someone did already use this machine or maybe Comgrow sold me a refurbished printer missing some parts at full price. Getting past the surprise of the purple filament in the nozzle I somehow got the test gcode to start printing for about 2 minutes before it stopped. With some fiddling I realized it stopped printing because the MicroSD was having issues keeping a good connection in the cardreader. My current solution to keep moving forward was to use a wooden ruler, an empty SD card case and the provided wrench to keep the MicroSD card pushed in like I believe it is supposed to be. That seemed to do the trick for now. I am disappointed that I received an item with signs of use and missing parts. Not sure if this was a used return passed off onto me or a poorly refurbished unit. Either way when you shop around and pay full price for a new item then that is what you should expect to be delivered to your door. Most of the stuff that was missing is easy enough to replace so I'm more concerned that the printer itself works as it should. Currently I'm printing the test dog and everything seems to be going good. It's pretty much just a coaster right now as only the base is done. I guess I learned my lesson about waiting so long to open stuff like this. I just hope for the best from here forward. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2020 by J.M.K. J.M.K.

  • First 3d printer.
This was our first 3D printer. Setup was a little confusing and tuning wasn't the easiest in the world. But once you get it set up and you look up a few tutorials online it works well. We like it a lot and have used it multiple times for several different things. Great printer for a great price.
Reviewed in the United States on July 24, 2023 by Trevor M.

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