OrangeStorm Giga vs Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer

Technical comparison · Fused filament fabrication (FFF/FDM)

In brief

OrangeStorm Giga is the one with the largest build area in its class. OrangeStorm Giga and Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer are two fused filament fabrication (fff/fdm) in a similar class. Choose OrangeStorm Giga if work area and maximum z height matters more; choose Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer if max print speed and multi-extruder matters more.

Parameter
Identity
Launch year 2024 2023
Use tier F3 — Advanced F2 — Intermediate
Price
Price (€) ~2800–3500 € 3999 €
Universal specs
Dimensions (W×D×H) (cm) 122.4 × 120.4 × 142.5 cm 70 × 90 × 72 cm
Weight (kg) 104 kg 33.7 kg
Work area (mm) 800 × 800 mm 360 × 360 mm
Z-axis height (mm) 1000 mm 360 mm
Power (W) 1530 W 235 W
Voltage (V) 230 V 230 V
Maximum speed 300 mm/s 400 mm/s
Declared precision 0.1 mm 0.2 mm
Category specs
XY print surface (mm) 800 mm 360 mm
Maximum Z height (mm) 1000 mm 360 mm
Kinematics cartesian corexy
Max nozzle temperature (°C) 300 °C 290 °C
Max bed temperature (°C) 100 °C 120 °C
Max print speed (mm/s) 300 mm/s 400 mm/s
Closed chamber False False
Filament sensor True True
Auto leveling mesh mesh
Standard nozzle diameter (mm) 0.6 mm 0.4 mm
Multi-extruder False True
Native Klipper True False
Input shaper True True
Multicolor printing False True
Requires external accessory True False
Maximum colors 4 5
Ecosystem
Cloud dependency No No
Software notes The system is powered by Klipper-based firmware, processed by a 64-bit quad-core SoC, enabling speeds up to 300 mm/s. Connectivity is comprehensive, offering USB, Ethernet, and Wi-Fi ports for the remote management of massive G-code files. The user interface is accessible via a generous 10.1-inch capacitive touchscreen, which is detachable from the chassis for comfortable positioning. The machine is best managed using the Elegoo Cura slicer but supports standard STL and OBJ formats, allowing broad workflow flexibility without any dependence on cloud platforms. The machine is managed through PrusaSlicer, with dedicated profiles for multi-toolhead configuration and automatic calculation of purge towers or wipe-to-infill strategies. The firmware includes Input Shaper and Pressure Advance for vibration compensation at high speeds. Network connectivity allows job submission and remote monitoring via Prusa Connect, though this is not a requirement for using the machine.

The differences that matter

  • Work area: OrangeStorm Giga 800×800 mm vs Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer 360×360 mm — OrangeStorm Giga wins (+394%)
  • Maximum Z height: OrangeStorm Giga 1000 mm vs Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer 360 mm — OrangeStorm Giga wins (+178%)
  • Price: OrangeStorm Giga 3150 € vs Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer 3999 € — OrangeStorm Giga wins (+27%)
  • Max print speed: OrangeStorm Giga 300 mm/s vs Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer 400 mm/s — Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer wins (+33%)
  • Multi-extruder: Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer yes, OrangeStorm Giga no

Which one to choose

Choose OrangeStorm Giga if…

you value work area, maximum z height and price. It is the one with the largest build area in its class. «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.»

See the OrangeStorm Giga sheet →

Choose Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer if…

you value max print speed, multi-extruder and multicolor printing. «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.»

See the Original Prusa XL 5-toolhead 3D Printer sheet →

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.