Voron is the name serious builders turn to for high-performance DIY 3D printers. Not a company selling finished machines, but an open-source design project, it pairs premium components with a CoreXY platform that invites endless modding and fine-tuning.
The Voron 2.4 is where it all comes together: fast, rigid, quad-gantry-leveled, and built to handle serious workloads, backed by one of the most active communities in the hobby.
Voron has carved out its place as the name serious builders turn to for high-performance DIY printers, machines for people who don't want to settle. What sets it apart is pairing premium components with a fully open-source design that gives you total control: tweak everything from hardware to firmware until the setup runs exactly how you want.
Voron printers aren't sold as kits by the official team. The entire design is open-source, so anyone can build one by sourcing parts, and the community is the engine behind it, contributing upgrades, troubleshooting, and constant refinement through a massive Discord and forum. The trade-off is the barrier to entry: it takes real expertise and 25 to 50 hours to build one.
For the full picture on the Voron 2.4, read the review above.
The enthusiast's CoreXY platform: top-tier speed and quality for those who love to build, tune, and mod their own machine.