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Co Print Launches First In-House 3D Printer, the Production-Focused Quadro

Co Print, known for multi-color upgrade kits, revealed its first original printer: the four-head Quadro, which has already pulled $1.5M in pre-launch demand.

Jamie Taylor2 min read
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Co Print Launches First In-House 3D Printer, the Production-Focused Quadro
Source: coprint3d.com

Co Print, the Turkey-based company that built its reputation selling multi-color upgrade kits and multi-material print heads for existing machines, stepped into original hardware territory on March 9, 2026, announcing the Quadro: its first in-house 3D printer platform and a direct play at production-scale FDM printing.

The Quadro is built around a 300 × 300 × 350 mm build volume and runs four independent print heads, a configuration Co Print is positioning as a waste-reducing answer to the purge-tower problem that plagues most multi-material setups. Where most color-switching systems burn filament flushing one material before loading the next, the Quadro's four-head architecture is designed to sidestep that loss entirely, making it a more material-efficient option for shops running high volumes of multi-color or multi-material parts.

The $1.5 million in pre-launch demand already logged before the official announcement signals that Co Print's existing community of upgrade-kit users translated quickly into Quadro interest. That number is notable for a company announcing its debut printer rather than a follow-up to an established line.

Co Print's upgrade kit background is directly relevant here. The company spent years developing multi-color head systems for third-party printers, which means the Quadro's multi-material toolhead is almost certainly built on considerable in-house IP rather than adapted from commodity components. Launching a purpose-built platform lets Co Print control the full hardware stack in a way that bolt-on upgrade kits never allowed.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The production orientation of the Quadro sets it apart from the wave of desktop enthusiast machines that have dominated recent FDM announcements. A 300 × 300 × 350 footprint combined with four heads points at small-batch manufacturing and prototyping environments rather than single-user desktop use, a segment where waste reduction and throughput matter more than entry price.

Full pricing and availability details beyond the pre-launch figures have not yet been released, but the $1.5M demand figure suggests Co Print is not treating the Quadro as a limited run.

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