---
product_id: 553449460
title: "Creality K1 Max 3D Printer with Smart AI Function 600mm/s Printing Speed 20000mm/s² Acceleration, Core XY Structure 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch Large Build Volume Auto Leveling Dual-Gear Extruder"
brand: "comgrow"
price: "₱122044"
currency: PHP
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
category: "Comgrow"
url: https://www.desertcart.ph/products/553449460-creality-k1-max-3d-printer-with-smart-ai-function-600mm
store_origin: PH
region: Philippines
---

# 600mm/s ultra-fast print speed 11.81-inch³ large build volume AI-powered print failure detection Creality K1 Max 3D Printer with Smart AI Function 600mm/s Printing Speed 20000mm/s² Acceleration, Core XY Structure 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch Large Build Volume Auto Leveling Dual-Gear Extruder

**Brand:** comgrow
**Price:** ₱122044
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🚀 Print Smarter, Faster & Bigger — Join the 3D Printing Revolution!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Creality K1 Max 3D Printer with Smart AI Function 600mm/s Printing Speed 20000mm/s² Acceleration, Core XY Structure 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch Large Build Volume Auto Leveling Dual-Gear Extruder by comgrow
- **How much does it cost?** ₱122044 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.ph](https://www.desertcart.ph/products/553449460-creality-k1-max-3d-printer-with-smart-ai-function-600mm)

## Best For

- comgrow enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted comgrow brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Blazing Fast Precision:** Experience industry-leading 600mm/s print speeds with 20,000mm/s² acceleration for rapid prototyping and production-grade models.
- • **Massive Build Capacity:** Print larger, more complex designs effortlessly with an expansive 11.81 x 11.81 x 11.81 inch build volume—perfect for scaling your creative projects.
- • **Effortless Auto-Leveling:** Dual strain sensor auto-leveling ensures flawless first layers without manual intervention, so you can focus on innovation, not calibration.
- • **Smart AI Quality Control:** Integrated AI Lidar and camera system detect print errors like spaghetti failures and debris in real-time, pausing prints to save time and materials.
- • **Rock-Solid Core XY Stability:** Core XY mechanical structure combined with directional cooling fans delivers consistent, smooth prints with minimal vibration and superior surface finish.

## Overview

The Creality K1 Max is a powerhouse 3D printer designed for professionals and enthusiasts alike, featuring ultra-fast 600mm/s print speeds, a spacious 11.81-inch cubic build volume, and advanced AI-driven print monitoring. Its Core XY structure and dual-gear extruder ensure stable, high-quality prints, while hands-free auto-leveling and smart failure detection minimize downtime. Ideal for rapid prototyping and large-scale projects, the K1 Max transforms your creative workflow with precision and efficiency.

## Description

Product description hero-video

Review: An awesome machine with great potential - (Attached are unboxing, partial assembly, and print quality pics) After much research and many YouTube videos over the past two years, I've finally decided to get into 3D printing by purchasing an Ender 3 Pro. And yes, while you can find it a little cheaper from other sellers, Comgrow had the best ratings and reviews on their Ender 3 Pro, so I felt spending a little more was a fair tradeoff in getting one from a trustworthy source. Do your research, watch assembly videos multiple times, watch them again, watch more videos on good and bad results, then put this together. I'm a tinkerer who doesn't back down from a DIY or self fix, but opening the box and seeing all the loose parts (mostly fasteners) even with the machine shipping partially assembled was still intimidating. I took my time and over the course of two hours made sure I had this machine assembled properly. Some people say they can assemble an Ender 3 in 40 mins. Hah, sure, if they've assembled one before. Take your time, lay out the parts packets, and only open them as needed while assembling, or you will end up hopelessly confused. Common Lego assembly rules apply. * edit* And DO NOT FORGET, those of you living in North America, to switch the red slider on the power supply from 240V to 120V (it comes 240 out of the box). If you don't do this: machine won't turn on (me, oops); machine turns on but takes forever to heat up; blown circuits constantly; hate, fear, suffering, and the Dark Side ruling your life. This is so easy to miss or forget to change, or even not know about.*edit* Out of the box, I installed an all metal extruder and Capricorn tube upgrades. I had also installed a spring upgrade for the bed, but failed to check the length of the "upgrade" bed springs, which I later found were way too long after trying to fix a bed leveling issue after a catastrophic failure mid print threw the bed way out of level. I've determined the too-long springs were the culprit after having gotten proper-length upgrade springs and getting consistent bed leveling results. I would definitely get the yellow "upgraded" springs as the stock springs are just way too soft/mushy in my opinion and will result in bed leveling issues on their own. As far as a glass bed upgrade out of the box, I advise using the stock magnetic bed for your first few prints, then get an upgraded glass bed to see the difference in results. It can go either way, both have their pros and cons. Using this machine is certainly a learning process, and _do not_ expect to get a perfect print on your first try; you might get lucky or you may have bed adhesion issues. There can be alot of trial and error, and endless calibration, before you start to see consistent results. And then WHAM, you get an unexpected failure and have to figure out how/why. Print failures _will_ happen for various reasons. Sometimes it's as simple as bad filament (read reviews!), sometimes it's a bed leveling issue or a temperature issue. This is part of the learning process with FDM printers, even the expensive ones. That said, at 0.2mm layer height and 200°C/50°C with PLA I have been getting excellent print quality more often than I've gotten failures (all failures due to bad bed adhesion). The key is getting a good first layer and bed adhesion. If either of those fail, your print is doomed. These all lead back to getting the bed level with the extruder nozzle and finding the sweet spot for nozzle/bed temperature combination, and different brands of PLA have their own/different sweet spots, hence you see 3D printer users pick a brand and stay with it. I recommend Comgrow PLA, I've had consistent results in print quality, bed adhesion issues not withstanding (remember, bed adhesion issues usually stem from an unlevel bed). So far, I'm absolutely loving this machine. Keep the above in mind, and don't get in a hurry--good quality prints, even of tiny objects, can take hours or days to complete. Have patience, and check that your bed is level at least every other print and you'll be fine.
Review: Fantastic first-time machine - I am very impressed by my first 3D printer - I got it for prototyping cast metal parts, and I knew it would be a rabbit hole of learning a whole new technology. But this printer has made it fun rather than difficult. Assembly took less than an hour, and within 24 hours, I had my first finished prototype, using bronze PLA. It's been running almost constantly in the 2 months I've had it. After reading reviews, I had painter's tape and hairspray at the ready, but I haven't needed them once. The magnetic bed is great, although it is getting chewed up, they're only $10 to replace. I have to relevel it using a test file once in a while, but usually I just watch the brim print when I start a file, and make any tiny adjustments to the leveling screws while it's running. I will note that the bed on mine has a slight flex upward in the middle - enough that the first layer is fully solid at the edges and nonexistant in the middle. This isn't a problem for me, as I use .6-1mm bottoms on prints, and I don't care how the bottom looks. But when I have to stop a file early on, scraping this area clean is a pain. Often a half-layer remains and is pulled off with the next successful print. Quality has met my expectations, though I've never tried printing below .1mm resolution. I just replaced the nozzle for the first time, and it had definitely degraded (pushing bronze PLA through a brass nozzle, I expected it would wear out fast). But it's back to normal now, and replacing the nozzle was simple, following instructions in a YouTube video. I did print a filament guide arm as my test file, and it seems to help as I've never had a tangle or stuck filament. I'm very impressed that my test print is now a permanent part of the printer - honestly I did not expect my first attempt hitting "print" would actually work. I'm planning a few upgrades - a Raspberry Pi with Octoprint and a webcam to enable a network interface, an auto-bed leveler. I'll probably try to get an acrylic case for it and print ABS before long - I've been working in PLA so far. This price point is incredible and allowed me to rapidly build a product line as I started my business - for the cost of Sketchup and this printer, I was able to produce perfect CAD files to send to production - prototypes that I had held in my hands and played with that cost about $1 each in PLA. That blows me away and reduced my startup time by months and thousands of dollars. My one gripe is that if I leave it on for a long time, including just having it's computer powered by USB, it'll start "hanging" when printing. It starts to print but will just stop running midway through, and instead starts this weird behavior of making a hex pattern of burnt plastic drips. So far I can't identify a cause - my STL files are clean - but I've noticed it goes away if I power it totally off for 20 minutes before starting a new print. I'm guessing there's a memory problem going on, but I haven't had time to troubleshoot it with the mfgr yet. Overall it's a major win - with the added bonus that it prints neat little toys, and replacement parts for household objects. I have a technologically-minded nephew who's 11, and he'll probably be getting one of these for Christmas. I would say that if a kid is smart enough to know what "this part is very hot" means, they could use one of these with very little support/supervision - but you might want to assist with things like assembly and replacing the nozzle, which involve small screws and a bit of experience.

## Features

- Smart AI Function: Creality K1 Max equips 1 Micrometer Resolution AI Lidar, which scans the first layer, if there is any problem, it will stop the printing job giving you quality models. Observant AI Camera can recognize spaghetti failure, foreign matter, debris, etc. and support real-time monitoring and time-lapse filming
- 12 Faster and More Efficient: Creality K1 Max 3d printer, equips printing speed 600 millimeter per second and acceleration 20000 millimeters per square second, it is12 times faster than the other normal 3d printer. Give good printing experience to customers and get a good model in short time
- Size-efficient with Max Capacity: K1 Max offers a 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch large build volume, which meets more requirement of larger printing model, or you can get a print farm on this printer
- Dual Hands-free Auto Leveling: Creality K1 Max 3d printer, its strain sensors in the heatbed for more precise auto leveling without any operation or attention
- More Efficient Function: Core XY Structure of K1 Max makes the printing more stable. Prompt model cooling by a fan on the printhead with directional air ducts and also an auxiliary fan in the build chamber.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #27,920 in Industrial & Scientific ( See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific ) #44 in 3D Printers |
| Brand | Comgrow |
| Color | K1Max |
| Compatible Devices | Laptop, PC |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 9,972 Reviews |
| Item Weight | 39.68 Pounds |
| Material | Glass and Metal |
| Product Dimensions | 17.12"D x 18.18"W x 20.7"H |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** Comgrow
- **Color:** K1Max
- **Item Weight:** 39.68 Pounds
- **Material:** Glass and Metal
- **Product Dimensions:** 17.12"D x 18.18"W x 20.7"H

## Images

![Creality K1 Max 3D Printer with Smart AI Function 600mm/s Printing Speed 20000mm/s² Acceleration, Core XY Structure 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch Large Build Volume Auto Leveling Dual-Gear Extruder - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61BYhW4RP3L.jpg)
![Creality K1 Max 3D Printer with Smart AI Function 600mm/s Printing Speed 20000mm/s² Acceleration, Core XY Structure 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch Large Build Volume Auto Leveling Dual-Gear Extruder - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51c939IKGZL.jpg)
![Creality K1 Max 3D Printer with Smart AI Function 600mm/s Printing Speed 20000mm/s² Acceleration, Core XY Structure 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch Large Build Volume Auto Leveling Dual-Gear Extruder - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61MDOty3PtL.jpg)
![Creality K1 Max 3D Printer with Smart AI Function 600mm/s Printing Speed 20000mm/s² Acceleration, Core XY Structure 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch Large Build Volume Auto Leveling Dual-Gear Extruder - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/6157RaxAn5L.jpg)
![Creality K1 Max 3D Printer with Smart AI Function 600mm/s Printing Speed 20000mm/s² Acceleration, Core XY Structure 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch Large Build Volume Auto Leveling Dual-Gear Extruder - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61uBwtrLl9L.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Set** options.

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ An awesome machine with great potential
*by A***. on November 16, 2019*

(Attached are unboxing, partial assembly, and print quality pics) After much research and many YouTube videos over the past two years, I've finally decided to get into 3D printing by purchasing an Ender 3 Pro. And yes, while you can find it a little cheaper from other sellers, Comgrow had the best ratings and reviews on their Ender 3 Pro, so I felt spending a little more was a fair tradeoff in getting one from a trustworthy source. Do your research, watch assembly videos multiple times, watch them again, watch more videos on good and bad results, then put this together. I'm a tinkerer who doesn't back down from a DIY or self fix, but opening the box and seeing all the loose parts (mostly fasteners) even with the machine shipping partially assembled was still intimidating. I took my time and over the course of two hours made sure I had this machine assembled properly. Some people say they can assemble an Ender 3 in 40 mins. Hah, sure, if they've assembled one before. Take your time, lay out the parts packets, and only open them as needed while assembling, or you will end up hopelessly confused. Common Lego assembly rules apply. * edit* And DO NOT FORGET, those of you living in North America, to switch the red slider on the power supply from 240V to 120V (it comes 240 out of the box). If you don't do this: machine won't turn on (me, oops); machine turns on but takes forever to heat up; blown circuits constantly; hate, fear, suffering, and the Dark Side ruling your life. This is so easy to miss or forget to change, or even not know about.*edit* Out of the box, I installed an all metal extruder and Capricorn tube upgrades. I had also installed a spring upgrade for the bed, but failed to check the length of the "upgrade" bed springs, which I later found were way too long after trying to fix a bed leveling issue after a catastrophic failure mid print threw the bed way out of level. I've determined the too-long springs were the culprit after having gotten proper-length upgrade springs and getting consistent bed leveling results. I would definitely get the yellow "upgraded" springs as the stock springs are just way too soft/mushy in my opinion and will result in bed leveling issues on their own. As far as a glass bed upgrade out of the box, I advise using the stock magnetic bed for your first few prints, then get an upgraded glass bed to see the difference in results. It can go either way, both have their pros and cons. Using this machine is certainly a learning process, and _do not_ expect to get a perfect print on your first try; you might get lucky or you may have bed adhesion issues. There can be alot of trial and error, and endless calibration, before you start to see consistent results. And then WHAM, you get an unexpected failure and have to figure out how/why. Print failures _will_ happen for various reasons. Sometimes it's as simple as bad filament (read reviews!), sometimes it's a bed leveling issue or a temperature issue. This is part of the learning process with FDM printers, even the expensive ones. That said, at 0.2mm layer height and 200°C/50°C with PLA I have been getting excellent print quality more often than I've gotten failures (all failures due to bad bed adhesion). The key is getting a good first layer and bed adhesion. If either of those fail, your print is doomed. These all lead back to getting the bed level with the extruder nozzle and finding the sweet spot for nozzle/bed temperature combination, and different brands of PLA have their own/different sweet spots, hence you see 3D printer users pick a brand and stay with it. I recommend Comgrow PLA, I've had consistent results in print quality, bed adhesion issues not withstanding (remember, bed adhesion issues usually stem from an unlevel bed). So far, I'm absolutely loving this machine. Keep the above in mind, and don't get in a hurry--good quality prints, even of tiny objects, can take hours or days to complete. Have patience, and check that your bed is level at least every other print and you'll be fine.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Fantastic first-time machine
*by P***. on June 26, 2019*

I am very impressed by my first 3D printer - I got it for prototyping cast metal parts, and I knew it would be a rabbit hole of learning a whole new technology. But this printer has made it fun rather than difficult. Assembly took less than an hour, and within 24 hours, I had my first finished prototype, using bronze PLA. It's been running almost constantly in the 2 months I've had it. After reading reviews, I had painter's tape and hairspray at the ready, but I haven't needed them once. The magnetic bed is great, although it is getting chewed up, they're only $10 to replace. I have to relevel it using a test file once in a while, but usually I just watch the brim print when I start a file, and make any tiny adjustments to the leveling screws while it's running. I will note that the bed on mine has a slight flex upward in the middle - enough that the first layer is fully solid at the edges and nonexistant in the middle. This isn't a problem for me, as I use .6-1mm bottoms on prints, and I don't care how the bottom looks. But when I have to stop a file early on, scraping this area clean is a pain. Often a half-layer remains and is pulled off with the next successful print. Quality has met my expectations, though I've never tried printing below .1mm resolution. I just replaced the nozzle for the first time, and it had definitely degraded (pushing bronze PLA through a brass nozzle, I expected it would wear out fast). But it's back to normal now, and replacing the nozzle was simple, following instructions in a YouTube video. I did print a filament guide arm as my test file, and it seems to help as I've never had a tangle or stuck filament. I'm very impressed that my test print is now a permanent part of the printer - honestly I did not expect my first attempt hitting "print" would actually work. I'm planning a few upgrades - a Raspberry Pi with Octoprint and a webcam to enable a network interface, an auto-bed leveler. I'll probably try to get an acrylic case for it and print ABS before long - I've been working in PLA so far. This price point is incredible and allowed me to rapidly build a product line as I started my business - for the cost of Sketchup and this printer, I was able to produce perfect CAD files to send to production - prototypes that I had held in my hands and played with that cost about $1 each in PLA. That blows me away and reduced my startup time by months and thousands of dollars. My one gripe is that if I leave it on for a long time, including just having it's computer powered by USB, it'll start "hanging" when printing. It starts to print but will just stop running midway through, and instead starts this weird behavior of making a hex pattern of burnt plastic drips. So far I can't identify a cause - my STL files are clean - but I've noticed it goes away if I power it totally off for 20 minutes before starting a new print. I'm guessing there's a memory problem going on, but I haven't had time to troubleshoot it with the mfgr yet. Overall it's a major win - with the added bonus that it prints neat little toys, and replacement parts for household objects. I have a technologically-minded nephew who's 11, and he'll probably be getting one of these for Christmas. I would say that if a kid is smart enough to know what "this part is very hot" means, they could use one of these with very little support/supervision - but you might want to assist with things like assembly and replacing the nozzle, which involve small screws and a bit of experience.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great printer
*by D***R on January 1, 2026*

I've had this about bit less than a year now, and it's my first 3D printer. It was pretty much ready to go and was a very easy first printer. It prints well, and has a large volume. I've tried various filaments and it has handled all of them (except one cheap PLA from "e-sun" but that's due to the poor quality filament). I did root it to use Orca and print wirelessly, but Creality software has gotten a bit better and you probably wouldn't even need to root anymore. Orca does have more options though. The creality app and cloud stuff is useless. If I did it all over again, I might look at the offerings from elegoo which are cheaper, but this is still a great deal IMO. I've put about 10 problem-free spools through it. I'm not into figurines and stuff, I mostly print tools or adapters for things around the house. I think if you want to do figurines you'd want a resin printer.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Creality K1 Max 3D Printer with Smart AI Function 600mm/s Printing Speed 20000mm/s² Acceleration, Core XY Structure 11.81x11.81x11.81 inch Large Build Volume Auto Leveling Dual-Gear Extruder
- Ender 3 V3 SE Double Sided PEO PEI Sheet, Smooth PEO and Textured PEI Magnetic Heated Bed 235 * 235mm for Creality K1C/K1/Ender 3 V3/Ender 3 V3 KE/Ender 3/Ender 3 Pro/Ender 3 V2/3 V2 Neo/CR 10 SE
- OVERTURE PLA Filament 1.75mm, Neatly Wound 3D Printer Filament 1kg Spool (2.2lbs), Dimensional Accuracy +/- 0.02 mm, Fit Most FDM 3D Printers (Black 1-Pack)

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*Product available on Desertcart Philippines*
*Store origin: PH*
*Last updated: 2026-05-24*