Centauri Carbon 2 vs Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer
Technical comparison · Fused filament fabrication (FFF/FDM)
Centauri Carbon 2 and Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer are not direct competitors: very different prices (~6.1×). Centauri Carbon 2 costs less (~€374) and is the entry-level choice; Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer offers more capability at a higher price (~€2299). Judge them by budget, not head-to-head.
| Parameter |
Centauri Carbon 2
Elegoo
F2 · Intermediate
|
Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer
Prusa Research
F2 · Intermediate
|
|---|---|---|
| Identity | ||
| Launch year | 2026 | 2025 |
| Use tier | F2 — Intermediate | F2 — Intermediate |
| Price | ||
| Price (€) | ~349–399 € | 2299 € |
| Universal specs | ||
| Dimensions (W×D×H) (cm) | 50 × 48 × 74.3 cm | 70 × 90 × 72 cm |
| Weight (kg) | 19.35 kg | — |
| Work area (mm) | 256 × 256 mm | 360 × 360 mm |
| Z-axis height (mm) | 256 mm | 360 mm |
| Power (W) | 1100 W | — |
| Voltage (V) | — | 230 V |
| Maximum speed | 500 mm/s | 400 mm/s |
| Declared precision | 0.1 mm | 0.2 mm |
| Category specs | ||
| XY print surface (mm) | 256 mm | 360.0 mm |
| Maximum Z height (mm) | 256 mm | 360.0 mm |
| Kinematics | corexy | corexy |
| Max nozzle temperature (°C) | 350 °C | 300 °C |
| Max bed temperature (°C) | 110 °C | 100 °C |
| Max print speed (mm/s) | 500 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 | False | True |
| Native Klipper | True | False |
| Input shaper | True | True |
| Multicolor printing | True | True |
| Requires external accessory | True | True |
| Maximum colors | 4 | 5 |
| Ecosystem | ||
| Cloud dependency | No | No |
| Software notes | The proprietary Elegoo OS, built on Klipper architecture, manages full-auto calibration routines and AI-assisted monitoring. The machine is primarily supported by Elegoo Slicer (an Orca Slicer derivative), ensuring optimal control over material profiles and dynamic color changes. Users can also natively use Orca Slicer or export G-code from third-party alternatives like Cura. The intuitive touchscreen and Wi-Fi connectivity enable seamless remote management and direct job queuing over the local network. | 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
- Price: Centauri Carbon 2 374 € vs Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer 2299 € — Centauri Carbon 2 wins (+515%)
- Work area: Centauri Carbon 2 256×256 mm vs Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer 360×360 mm — Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer wins (+98%)
- Closed chamber: Centauri Carbon 2 yes, Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer no
- Maximum Z height: Centauri Carbon 2 256 mm vs Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer 360 mm — Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer wins (+41%)
- Max print speed: Centauri Carbon 2 500 mm/s vs Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer 400 mm/s — Centauri Carbon 2 wins (+25%)
Which one to choose
Choose Centauri Carbon 2 if…
you value price, closed chamber and max print speed. «A closed chamber reduces thermal gradients around the part being built, limiting warping and cracking caused by rapid cooling in high-shrinkage materials such as ABS, ASA, and PC. It also shields the mechanism from drafts and airborne particles. A closed chamber is effectively necessary for technical materials; for PLA and PETG it is an advantage, not a requirement.»
Choose Original Prusa XL Single-toolhead 3D Printer if…
you value work area, maximum z height and multi-extruder. «The Z height determines how tall a part the machine can produce in one print. Vertical objects such as vases, load-bearing structures, or casting patterns require a high Z travel. A lower value does not affect quality but forces the user to split or reorient the model. Z height should be considered alongside the XY surface to assess total usable build volume.»
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.