Home 3D Printing News 3D Printers Bambu Lab says its latest 3D printer is “extra large”. Let’s be...

Bambu Lab says its latest 3D printer is “extra large”. Let’s be clear about what this means

3D printed bird in different colors

3D printer manufacturer Bambu Lab has announced the A2L, the latest addition to its A-Series desktop lineup. Positioned as a “large-format” machine for creative users, the A2L features a build volume of 330 × 320 × 325 mm, a 105% increase over standard 256 mm-class machines in the brand’s own ecosystem. It is available globally starting June 1, 2026, starting at $469 (non-combo).

On paper, it’s a solid release. The machine packs in a closed-loop PMSM servo motor, adaptive vibration compensation with multi-point calibration, integrated granular dampers, and a comprehensive detection system, all features typically reserved for higher-end models.

It also supports up to 19 colors via four AMS units, targets print farms alongside the usual creative audience (cosplayers, families, home décor enthusiasts), and even doubles as a cutting plotter via a Blade Cutting Upgrade Kit.

Bambu Lab has been steadily expanding its ecosystem, from the H2D all-in-one manufacturing station to the H2C with 24-filament simultaneous printing, open-source footwear designs, and even a flagship retail store in Shenzhen.

A word of caution for industrial readers.

A2L 3D printer
A2L 3D printer. Credit: Bambu Lab

The term “large-format” deserves scrutiny here. In the industrial AM world, large-format additive manufacturing refers to systems capable of producing yacht hull molds, autoclave tooling, life-size furniture, or entire building components, machines where build volumes of 600 × 300 × 600 mm are already disqualified as insufficiently large. That definition doesn’t apply to the A2L.

The A2L’s 330 mm build volume is larger than Bambu Lab’s own A-Series standard, but well within, and in some cases below, what open-frame competitors like the Elegoo Neptune 4 Max (420 × 420 × 480 mm) or the Anycubic Kobra 3 Max (420 × 420 mm) already offer. The “extra large” claim is relative to Bambu Lab’s own ecosystem, not to the open-frame market at large. The distinction matters, because Bambu Lab’s machines can be used beyond the maker community, in small-batch production, print farms, and light industrial workflows.

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