The MarkForged Mark Two is the first 3D printer in the world capable of embedding continuous strand carbon fiber, Kevlar®, and fiberglass into high quality Nylon resulting in incredibly strong parts. The choice of reinforcement lets you print parts, tooling, and fixtures with a higher strength-to-weight ratio than 6061-T6 Aluminium, a higher abrasion resistance and the best strength-to-cost. Now you can print parts 24 times stronger than ABS.
The Mark Two uses a patent pending Continuous Filament Fabrication (CFF™) process to 3D print continuous strand carbon fiber, Kevlar®, and fiberglass. Utilizing the CFF™ print head and one FFF (Fused Filament Fabrication) print head, the Mark Two can create astonishingly robust parts by reinforcing MarkForged’s special blend of nylon with continuous fiber filaments.
The Mark Two also prints in Onyx or carbon fibre reinforced Onyx. Onyx is Markforged's beautiful black filament made from combining tough nylon with micro-carbon reinforcement. Onyx gives you stiff and dimensionally stable engineering grade parts, with twice the strength of other 3D printed plastics. Onyx parts have a high quality surface finish and high heat tolerance.
High Strength Material Printing
- Carbon Fiber – Highest strength-to-weight
- Kevlar® – Highest abrasion resistance
- Fiberglass – Highest strength-to-cost
- High Temperature Fibreglass - heat resistant up to 140 degrees C
- Nylon – Tough engineering plastic
- Onyx - Superior performance nylon with micro-carbon fibers composite
How It Works
The Mark Two has two print heads. One builds Nylon parts. The other is a revolutionary, new composite print head to reinforce those parts with continuous fiber.
Powerful Software
Every Mark Two comes with Eiger, our browser based 3D printing software. Eiger runs on any computer and is designed to be easy to use. So you can get printing quickly.
Precision Design
The Mark Two print bed clicks into place with 10 micron accuracy – allowing you to pause a print, remove the bed, add components, click the bed back in and then continue the print in the exact same position.
Read the Develop3D.com "Markforged Mark Two" Hardware Review
In the video below, see how a tow hook, 3D printed on a Mark Two 3D Printer, holds up to a 1360kg car