Creality Ender-3 V3

from $239
Build Volume
220×220×250 mm
Max Speed
600 mm/s
Frame Type
cartesian
Extruder
Direct Drive

Specifications

Build Volume

X × Y × Z220×220×250 mm

Speed

Print Speed600 mm/s

Temperature

Max Nozzle Temp300°C
Max Bed Temp110°C

Layer Height

Range0.1 - 0.35 mm

Construction

Frame Typecartesian
ExtruderDirect Drive
Filament Diameter1.75 mm
Nozzle Diameter0.4 mm

Physical

Weight7.83 kg

Information

Release Year2024

Description

The Creality Ender-3 V3 is a fast entry-level FDM printer with CoreXZ kinematics, released in 2024 as the final and most refined model in the classic Ender-3 line. Unlike the stripped-down SE and KE versions, the original V3 comes with a direct drive extruder, a tri-metal 300 °C hotend, and the same 4.3-inch color touchscreen used on the K1 series. It costs $239 on the official Creality store and around 27,600 ₽ on AliExpress.

The CoreXZ motion system is the printer's headline feature: two belts drive the X and Z axes simultaneously, which stiffens the frame and enables speeds up to 600 mm/s with 20,000 mm/s² acceleration. The build volume is 220×220×250 mm, layer height 0.1–0.35 mm, nozzle up to 300 °C, bed up to 110 °C, and a flexible PEI plate is included. Full auto leveling, a built-in G-sensor for input shaping, a filament sensor, Wi-Fi, and Creality Cloud support are all standard.

Advantages

  • Real 600 mm/s speed at 20,000 mm/s² acceleration — CoreXZ delivers a stiffer, more responsive frame than a traditional Ender-3 bedslinger
  • Direct drive with Unicorn tri-metal 300 °C nozzle — stable printing with PLA, PETG, ABS, TPU and PLA-CF / PETG-CF composites
  • 4.3" color touchscreen borrowed from the K1 — clean menus, full auto leveling and calibration in a few taps
  • Flexible PEI build plate with magnetic base heated to 110 °C — solid adhesion, parts pop off by flexing without a spatula
  • Low $239 entry price for an open CoreXZ machine with a touchscreen — one of the best deals in the sub-$300 class per Tom's Hardware
  • Klipper-based open firmware — easy to mod, with an active 3dtoday and Reddit community behind it

Disadvantages

  • Open frame with no enclosed chamber — ABS and ASA warp at the corners and results are unstable in a cold room
  • Per the Tom's Hardware review, several calibration cycles are required for flawless prints — not ideal for an absolute beginner
  • Only 7.83 kg of mass at 600 mm/s — the printer visibly vibrates on the desk at top speeds, a rigid stand is recommended
  • No remote monitoring camera, no multi-color printing, no active chamber heating — a single-color, single-material workflow only

The Ender-3 V3 suits enthusiasts and experienced makers who want a fast open direct drive printer at the lowest possible price rather than a sealed CoreXY system. It's a good pick for PLA, PETG and composite printing, classroom projects, Klipper upgrades, and firmware experimentation. Beginners who want great prints straight out of the box should consider the Ender-3 V3 SE or the Bambu Lab A1 instead.

Bottom line: the Ender-3 V3 is the mature final version of the legendary lineup and the first time Creality has brought CoreXZ into the budget segment. It's a machine for users who value speed, openness, and are willing to invest time in calibration for an excellent price-to-performance ratio.

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