Home Windows Creality Ender 5 S1 review: Speed on paper, not in plastic

Creality Ender 5 S1 review: Speed on paper, not in plastic


Creality has been in the home 3D printer market for a while; with their near stratospheric rise to fame with the CR-10 and later the Ender 3, Creality went on to swap the “i3” style design for a box frame cartesian and bring out the Ender 5. What is a Box frame cartesian? Well, unlike a CoreXY such as my Voron v0.1 or the Creality Ender 7, wherein two motors work together to move in the X and Y directions, a box frame cartesian works more like the Ender 3 with discrete motors for X, Y, and Z all working independently of each other, the upside of this is that it is incredibly easy to make, the downside is that because it is one motor per axis, top speed, and acceleration isn’t quite as high.

That’s what the Ender 5 was, and the Ender 5 S1 is that, but using the Ender 3 S1 as a stepping stone, so instead of the 12864 full graphics LCD, we have a full-color touchscreen; instead of the PTFE lined MK8 hotend and a cheap plastic bowden extruder, we have an all metal higher flow hotend with a dual gear direct sprite hotend.





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