![]() Support for Filament Runout/Width Sensors.Support for mixing and multi-extruders (Cyclops, Chimera, Diamond).Linear Advance for pressure-based extrusion.Bed Leveling Compensation - with or without a bed probe.Host-based and SD Card printing with autostart.LCD Controller UI with more than 30 language translations.Support for up to 5 extruders plus a heated printbed.Closed-loop PID heater control with auto-tuning, thermal protection, safety cutoff.Support for Cartesian, Delta, SCARA, and Core/H-Bot kinematics.Smart motion system with lookahead, interrupt-based movement, linear acceleration.Complete G-code movement suite, including lines, arcs, and Bézier curves.Full-featured G-code with over 150 commands.Features are enabled as-needed to adapt Marlin to added components. A Marlin build can be very small, for use on a headless printer with only modest hardware. We want it to be configurable, customizable, extensible, and economical for hobbyists and vendors alike. ![]() ![]() The reference platforms for Marlin is an Arduino Mega2560 with RAMPS 1.4 and Re-Arm with Ramps 1.4.Īs a community product, Marlin aims to be adaptable to as many boards and configurations as possible. These chips are at the center of the popular open source Arduino/Genuino platform. One key to Marlin’s popularity is that it runs on inexpensive 8-bit Atmel AVR micro-controllers - Marlin 2.x has added support for 32-bit boards. Marlin is also capable of driving CNC machines and laser engravers. LulzBot, Průša Research, Crealit圓D, BIQU, Geeetech, and Ultimaker are just a few of the vendors who ship a variant of Marlin. Marlin is licensed under the GPLv3 and is free for all applications.įrom the start Marlin was built by and for RepRap enthusiasts to be a straightforward, reliable, and adaptable printer driver that “just works.” As a testament to its quality, Marlin is used by several respected commercial 3D printers. ![]() Marlin is an open source firmware for the RepRap family of replicating rapid prototypers - popularly known as “3D printers.” It was derived from Sprinter and grbl, and became a standalone open source project on Augwith its Github release. ![]()
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