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G5 Ultra Pellet 3D Printer

Desktop, Built Volume: 500×500×400mm

 

Cut your material costs by more than 60% by printing with Plastic pellets and recycled plastics instead of filament. For a wide range of applications, 3D printing with pellets and shredded recycled plastic is a financial and environmental win-win.

  • Nozzle Temperature up to 400℃

  • Rapid Heating of Hot Bed up to 120℃

  • Screw Extruder Design

  • Suitable for More Materials

G5 3D PELLET PRINTER

G12 Pellet 3D Printer

Large Scale, Built Volume: 1200×1000×1000mm

 

The G12 Pellet 3D Printer is a large-format pellet extrusion printer capable of printing medium-to-large format parts.

  • Nozzle Temperature up to 450℃

  • Rapid Heating of Hot Bed up to 120℃

  • High Flow Screw Extrusion

  • Powerful Servo Motor

G12 3D PELLET PRINTER

G40 Pellet 3D Printer

Large Scale, Built Volume: 3725×2500×1330mm

 

The G40 Pellet 3D Printer, PioCreat’s largest industrial printer, is a versatile and reliable industrial additive and CNC five-axis manufacturing integrated Machine

  • Large Working Space

  • Workbench Design

  • CNC Five-axis Head

  • High Flow Screw Extrusion

G40PELLET PRINTER

What is pellet 3D printer? 

Fused granulate fabrication (FGF) is an Screw extrusion-based 3D printing technique where plastic pellets are fed and extruded through a nozzle. FGF may be referred to as Fused Granulate Fabrication, Fused Particle Fabrication, or Pellet 3D Printing.

What is the different between FGF and FFF 3D printing?
FGF and FFF 3D printing differ primarily in material use. FGF uses melted plastic pellets, offering stronger extrusion and suitability for large industrial parts, lower costs, and environmentally friendly production. FFF uses plastic filaments, which can suffer material performance loss and filament breakage.


Which materials can be used with a pellet 3D printer?
Pellet 3D printers offer outstanding material adaptability, supporting both traditional commercial thermoplastics and recycled materials like PLA, ABS, PETG, and TPU. Additionally, they are compatible with popular carbon fiber-reinforced materials for FGF printing, including PC-CF, PA-CF, PLA-CF, and ABS-CF.

Are pellets cheaper than filament?


Pellets are cheaper than filament not only because one processing step is eliminated but also because pellet-form plastics are used in injection molding and other types of manufacturing already, so the market for pellets is huge, which keeps prices low.

What are the advantages of Pellet 3D printers?

Pellet 3D printing reduces costs by 60–90% compared to filament, offers high extrusion volume and stable feeding for efficient, large-format printing, and allows for a wide range of thermoplastics with customizable color options during printing, ideal for industrial use.


 

What is the extrusion volume of PioCreat pellet 3D printers?

 

The G5Ultra offers a maximum extrusion volume of 0.8 kg/h, the G12 reaches 5 kg/h, and the G40 delivers up to 25 kg/h—significantly surpassing the 40–50 g/h extrusion volume typical of FDM 3D printers.

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