Elegoo
Saturn 4 Ultra VS Formlabs
Form 4
A scrappy $524 MSLA powerhouse goes head-to-head with a $4,000+ professional printing ecosystem. One printer for the maker. One printer for the enterprise. Which one belongs in your workflow?
The Setup
Two Different Philosophies of Resin Printing
At Dreaming3D, we run both resin and FDM printers daily — and nothing crystallizes the diversity of this industry like comparing the Elegoo Saturn 4 Ultra and the Formlabs Form 4. These two machines share a category name (resin 3D printers) and almost nothing else.
The Saturn 4 Ultra is Elegoo's flagship large-format MSLA printer, arriving in 2024 and quickly becoming the brand's best-selling resin machine. It targets hobbyists, miniature painters, terrain builders, jewelry makers, and small-batch creators who want professional-tier output without a professional-tier price tag.
The Formlabs Form 4 is a fourth-generation professional printing system built for engineering teams, dental labs, product designers, and industrial prototyping environments. It won 3D Printing Industry's Desktop Non-FFF 3D Printer of the Year for 2025 — and its price reflects every one of those accolades.
This is not really a competition — it's a study in where your money goes and what problems each machine solves. Let's break both down completely.
Elegoo
Saturn 4 Ultra 12K
"Big, fast, and cheap — you can have all three." The Saturn 4 Ultra breaks the old resin tradeoff triangle.
- TechnologyMSLA · 12K Mono LCD
- Build Volume218.88 × 122.88 × 220 mm
- XY Resolution~19 × 24 µm pixels
- Release MechTilt-vat system
- Resin EcosystemOpen · any 405nm
- AI FeaturesFailure detection, heating
- Price~$524 USD
Formlabs
Form 4
Built for professional reliability. A full printing ecosystem with validated materials, tight tolerances, and zero guesswork.
- TechnologyLFD MSLA (SLA-hybrid)
- Build Volume200 × 125 × 210 mm
- XY Resolution50 µm pixels
- Layer Thickness25 – 300 µm (Z)
- Max Print Speed100 mm/h
- Resin EcosystemClosed (OMM ~$875)
- Price~$3,499–$4,069 USD
Technology
How Each Machine Actually Works
Both printers use bottom-up masked photopolymer printing — but their engineering approaches diverge sharply at the light engine level.
The Saturn 4 Ultra uses a conventional MSLA setup with a 12K mono LCD panel and Fresnel collimating optics that produce uniform light exposure across the entire build plate. Where it gets interesting is the tilt-release vat mechanism — instead of pure vertical Z-lift (which creates significant suction forces and slows layer cycles), the vat tilts slightly to progressively peel the print from the FEP film. This dramatically reduces peel force and cycle time, enabling faster print speeds than most traditional MSLA machines.
The Formlabs Form 4 uses what Formlabs calls their Low Force Display (LFD) Print Engine — a six-subsystem optical unit combining 17 optical components, ultra-high-power LEDs, collimating lenses, a patented release texture on the tank, and a flexible film tank. This is Formlabs' version of MSLA but engineered to extremely tight tolerances. The result is a maximum print speed of 100 mm/h with an average of around 40 mm/h at 100µm layer height — meaning most prints finish in under two hours. Formlabs claims their system maintains speed consistency regardless of how many parts are on the build plate simultaneously, which is critical for batch production.
The Saturn 4 Ultra's pixel density is actually tighter than the Form 4's in raw numbers: approximately 19 × 24 µm pixels vs. Form 4's 50 µm XY resolution. However, resolution numbers alone don't tell the whole story — Formlabs' dimensional accuracy (±0.15% XY tolerance), validated material profiles, and consistent repeatability across prints are what separate engineering-grade output from hobby-grade output. For miniatures and terrain, Saturn's pixel density wins. For functional mechanical parts and medical prototypes, Form 4's validated precision ecosystem wins.
Specs Side by Side
The Full Numbers Breakdown
| Specification | Saturn 4 Ultra | Formlabs Form 4 |
|---|---|---|
| Print Technology | MSLA · 12K Mono LCD | LFD MSLA (LCD + SLA hybrid) |
| Build Volume (W × D × H) | 218.88 × 122.88 × 220 mmLarger | 200 × 125 × 210 mm |
| XY Pixel Size | ~19 × 24 µmFiner | 50 µm |
| Z Layer Thickness | Varies by resin | 25 – 300 µm |
| Max Print Speed | Fast (tilt-vat accelerated) | 100 mm/hRated |
| Dimensional Tolerance | Hobby/prosumer | ±0.15% XYValidated |
| Leveling | One-click auto leveling | Guided + auto calibration |
| Monitoring | AI failure detection | 5MP integrated cameraPro |
| Resin Heating | Active heating (built-in) | Controlled via materials |
| Resin Ecosystem | Open · any 405nmFlexible | Closed (OMM unlock ~$875) |
| Slicer / Software | Chitubox / Lychee compatible | PreForm (proprietary)Polished |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi, USB, Ethernet | Wi-Fi, Ethernet, Dashboard |
| Entry Price (printer only) | ~$524Value | ~$3,499–$4,069 |
| Full Setup Cost | ~$600–$900 (wash + cure) | $5,600+ complete package |
| Resin Cost per Liter | $20–$50 (third party) | $79–$150+ (Formlabs brand) |
Print Quality
Resolution, Tolerances, and Surface Finish
In raw pixel density, the Saturn 4 Ultra wins on paper. Its 12K panel achieves approximately 19 × 24 µm pixels — genuinely excellent for miniatures, figurines, jewelry, and tabletop terrain. Reviewers with 300+ hours of testing call the resolution "overkill for standard miniatures and more than enough for professional prototyping."
The Formlabs Form 4's 50 µm XY resolution is coarser in pixel size but is paired with advanced pixel smoothing, anti-aliasing, and a materials library tuned precisely to the LFD exposure system. The result is surfaces that reviewers describe as nearly indistinguishable from injection-molded plastics — layer lines virtually invisible on sidewalls. That's the difference between hardware specs and system-level engineering.
For functional parts — mechanical components, snap-fits, dental appliances, engineering prototypes that need to test, iterate, and eventually become production tooling — Form 4's ±0.15% XY dimensional tolerance and validated material repeatability make it the professional choice. Multi-part assemblies fit together reliably across print jobs. The Saturn 4 Ultra, while excellent, doesn't carry that level of validated dimensional certainty.
The Saturn 4 Ultra's 12K resolution is genuinely excellent — not 'good for the price' excellent, but excellent full stop. For most hobby applications, it's more resolution than you'll ever actually need.
— 3DTechValley, 200+ print review, January 2026Total Cost of Ownership
The Real Price of Professional Printing
The sticker price gap is significant. But the total cost of ownership gap is staggering. Here's how the full picture looks across both ecosystems.
The Formlabs closed ecosystem has historically been its biggest criticism. Formlabs-branded resins run $79–$150+ per liter, compared to $20–$50/liter for quality third-party resins compatible with the Saturn 4 Ultra. For a studio printing multiple liters per week, the annual resin cost differential alone can exceed the Saturn 4 Ultra's purchase price.
The good news for Formlabs users: as of 2026, Open Material Mode (OMM) is available as an approximately $875 upgrade, unlocking use of virtually any 405nm third-party resin. This changes the value equation meaningfully for labs that are cost-sensitive. Without it, you're fully locked in.
Formlabs also offers bulk pricing at $35/liter for SLA resin for high-volume production users — an option that closes the gap considerably for shops running the printer around the clock.
Category Scores
How They Stack Up by Use Case
Buyer Guide
Who Should Buy Each Printer?
Buy the Saturn 4 Ultra if you are…
The Hobbyist, Creator, or Small-Batch Producer
- A miniature painter, terrain builder, or tabletop gaming creator
- A jewelry designer wanting wax-castable or detailed prototype prints
- A hobbyist upgrading from an entry-level 4K or 8K machine
- Running a small print farm or selling resin prints online
- Someone who wants to experiment with many different resin types freely
- A maker who needs a large build volume without a large budget
- Starting out with resin printing and wanting the least risky entry point
Buy the Formlabs Form 4 if you are…
The Engineering Team or Professional Studio
- An engineering or product design team needing validated dimensional accuracy
- A dental lab printing prosthetics, surgical guides, or dental appliances
- A manufacturing studio requiring certified biocompatible or engineering resins
- A prototyping shop where print failure costs real money and real time
- Someone who needs a fully supported, serviceably reliable ecosystem
- A business that can justify the $5,600+ complete setup cost with billable output
- Teams that need remote print monitoring and fleet management (Formlabs Dashboard)
The Ecosystem Question
Formlabs' Locked Ecosystem:
Feature or Flaw?
The most polarizing aspect of any Formlabs purchase is the closed resin ecosystem. Formlabs makes its machines foolproof by engineering every material to the printer's exposure profile — validated results, predictable cure behavior, and accurate material profiles built into PreForm. That's genuinely valuable in a professional context where failed prints mean failed deadlines.
But the cost is real. Without Open Material Mode, you're paying $79–$150+ per liter of resin, and the printer simply won't cooperate with anything else. The original OMM unlock was reportedly $2,499 — now reduced to approximately $875, which is a meaningful improvement but still a significant additional investment on top of an already expensive machine.
The Saturn 4 Ultra runs any 405nm resin on the market. That means you can source $25/liter hobby resins, specialty castable resins, engineering formulations, or exotic water-washable options. For creative flexibility and cost efficiency, the open ecosystem is simply better.
The counterargument: for a dental lab or engineering team, the cost difference per liter is irrelevant compared to the cost of a failed part or a rejected prototype. Formlabs' validated material certainty is worth the premium in those environments.
Real-World Context
What We See In San Diego Print Shops
At Dreaming3D, we service and run resin printers across both the hobbyist and prosumer spectrum — including Elegoo Saturn and Mars machines, as well as clients bringing in Formlabs units for repair and maintenance. The pattern we see is consistent: hobbyists and makers overwhelmingly gravitate toward Elegoo's value ecosystem, while dental practices and engineering contractors pay Formlabs' premium without hesitation because their workflow demands it.
For most San Diego makers — people printing cosplay accessories, prop replicas, custom jewelry, game pieces, or prototyping product ideas — the Saturn 4 Ultra is simply the smarter buy. The print quality is legitimately professional, the auto-leveling removes setup friction, and the open resin ecosystem keeps ongoing costs manageable.
If you're running a professional prototyping operation, dental practice, or engineering firm and need certified materials with validated dimensional accuracy and a fully supported hardware ecosystem — that's exactly when Formlabs earns its price tag.
Whether you're maintaining either machine, troubleshooting FEP replacement, dialing in resin settings, or choosing your first setup — our team at Dreaming3D is here to help. We service both ecosystems.
Dreaming3D Inc. · San Diego, CA
Need Help Choosing, Setting Up,
or Repairing Your Resin Printer?
We offer expert 3D printer repair, resin printing services, and hands-on consultations for hobbyists and professionals alike. Whether you're troubleshooting a Saturn 4 Ultra FEP issue or calibrating a Form 4 — we've got you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common Questions Answered
Alternative Headline Options
- "$524 vs $4,069: The Resin Printer Battle That Actually Matters in 2026"
- "Elegoo Saturn 4 Ultra vs Formlabs Form 4 — Maker Machine vs Professional System"
- "12K MSLA vs LFD Engineering: Which Resin Printer Wins For Your Workflow?"