H2D Pro vs Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer
Technical comparison · Fused filament fabrication (FFF/FDM)
H2D Pro and Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer are two fused filament fabrication (fff/fdm) in a similar class. Choose H2D Pro if max print speed matters more; choose Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer if price matters more. On the category's overall technical index, H2D Pro scores 69/100 against 39/100 for Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer.
| Parameter |
H2D Pro
Bambu Lab
F3 · Advanced
|
Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer
Prusa Research
F2 · Intermediate
|
|---|---|---|
| Identity | ||
| Launch year | 2025 | 2025 |
| Use tier | F3 — Advanced | F2 — Intermediate |
| Price | ||
| Price (€) | ~3500–3800 € | 2299 € |
| Universal specs | ||
| Dimensions (W×D×H) (cm) | 49.2 × 51.4 × 62.6 cm | 70 × 90 × 72 cm |
| Weight (kg) | 31 kg | — |
| Work area (mm) | 350 × 320 mm | 360 × 360 mm |
| Z-axis height (mm) | 325 mm | 360 mm |
| Power (W) | 2200 W | — |
| Voltage (V) | 220 V | 230 V |
| Maximum speed | 1000 mm/s | 400 mm/s |
| Declared precision | 50 μm | 0.2 mm |
| Category specs | ||
| XY print surface (mm) | 320 mm | 360.0 mm |
| Maximum Z height (mm) | 325 mm | 360.0 mm |
| Kinematics | corexy | corexy |
| Max nozzle temperature (°C) | 350 °C | 300 °C |
| Max bed temperature (°C) | 120 °C | 100 °C |
| Max print speed (mm/s) | 1000 mm/s | 400 mm/s |
| Closed chamber | True | False |
| Filament sensor | True | True |
| Auto leveling | mesh | mesh |
| Standard nozzle diameter (mm) | 0.4 mm | 0.4 mm |
| Multi-extruder | True | True |
| Native Klipper | False | False |
| Input shaper | True | True |
| Multicolor printing | True | True |
| Requires external accessory | False | True |
| Maximum colors | 4 | 5 |
| Ecosystem | ||
| Cloud dependency | No | No |
| Software notes | The native software is Bambu Studio, available for Windows and macOS, with advanced slicing and direct integration of the machine's proprietary features. The printer is also compatible with third-party slicers that export standard G-code (PrusaSlicer, SuperSlicer, Cura), though some advanced functions — including AMS control, Vision Encoder calibration, and chamber management — may be unavailable or only partially supported outside the Bambu ecosystem. | The printer runs Marlin firmware customized by Prusa, heavily influenced by Klipper and natively compatible with PrusaSlicer for tool-change management, Input Shaper, and Pressure Advance. Other slicers such as Cura or Simplify3D produce standard G-code but don't support tool changing or the segmented bed. The G-code protocol is open, and control via OctoPrint or Pronterface is possible. PrusaConnect and Wi-Fi are built in for remote management, while the absence of a locked proprietary ecosystem allows the use of third-party filaments and spare parts. |
The differences that matter
- Max print speed: H2D Pro 1000 mm/s vs Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer 400 mm/s — H2D Pro wins (+150%)
- Price: H2D Pro 3650 € vs Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer 2299 € — Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer wins (+59%)
- Closed chamber: H2D Pro yes, Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer no
- Requires external accessory: Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer yes, H2D Pro no
- Max nozzle temperature: H2D Pro 350 °C vs Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer 300 °C — H2D Pro wins (+17%)
Which one to choose
Choose H2D Pro if…
you value max print speed, closed chamber and max nozzle temperature. «The rated maximum speed indicates the theoretical hardware limit, not the everyday working speed. Faster machines reduce print times on simple geometries, but real-world speed depends on material, geometry, required surface finish, and slicer settings. Values above 200–300 mm/s are meaningful only on machines with CoreXY kinematics, active input shaping, and a stiffened mechanical frame.»
Choose Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer if…
you value price, work area and maximum colors. «The maximum number of colors indicates how many distinct color zones or materials can be used in one print without manual intervention. Two colors cover most practical uses, including soluble support. Higher values are useful for complex decorative models or color-coded prototypes. Each additional color increases print time due to transition purges, so the practical benefit should be weighed against the added time cost.»
MakerSpecs is an independent atlas. We don't sell products: this comparison links to both sheets, where you'll find complete data and official links.