Printing anything on a 3D printer is an exercise in patience. Though speeds have increased a great deal over the past two years, even thebest 3D printerstake hours to finish a medium-sized project. Even small prints such as Benchy, a boat model that enthusiasts use for testing, require 13 to 30 minutes on thefastest 3D printerswe’ve tested.

Amazingly, Maker Monika McWuff was able to output a Benchy in justtwo minutes and 9 seconds, thanks to her custom-modified Ender 3 Pro printer and its 120mm/s³ flow rate. She had posted an earlier video of the printer completing the task in 2 minutes and 19 seconds.

Monika McWuff�s 3D Printer

Only the 2:19 time has so far made the#SpeedBoatRace LeaderBoard, a list of prints that follow the officialSpeed Benchy rules.Annex Engineeringverifies the claims so perhaps the 2:09 time hasn’t been verified yet. Either way, McWuff holds the new world record, besting a maker named Beraval who posted atime of 2:40in 2022.

We should note that Speed Benchy prints don’t necessarily look great and don’t have to in order to make the leaderboard. McWuff’s 2:09 print has a ton of stringing and mush.

Monika McWuff’s Speed Benchy

Surprisingly, McWuff is new to 3D printing, having purchased her first Ender 3 Pro less than a year ago to make parts for an RC car. She got the inspiration to modify an Ender after watching247 Printing’s sub 3 minute Benchyand thought, “Pfff, how hard could it be?”

She bought a used Ender 3 Pro off eBay for $80 to start the project, then researched and taught herself how to make the necessary mods over the course of five months. McWuff admits she can get kind of obsessive about projects, and “if you’re able to speed run it, I will make it fast!”

Monika McWuff’s Floor Blower

Some of her mods are fairly standard, likeKevinAkaSam’s Belt Driven Ender 3, which replaced the Z rods with, you guessed it, belts. This allows the printer to run smooth, straight and precisely in sync.

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Monika McWuff’s Volcano Nozzle

Other mods are pure out-of-the-box thinking, like using a floor blower for cooling and bolting the printer to a 45-pound rubber bumper plate from the gym. “I used wood screws and some brackets to screw the printer down to the plate and dissipate energy,” she said.

There isn’t a lot of the original Ender 3 Pro left, just a few aluminum extrusions and part of the bed, now covered in a sheet of carbon fiber. She uses her stock Ender 3 Pro in a tented enclosure to print ABS parts for the project.

Denise Bertacchi

The printer has 9 motors all together, with one for the extruder, four on the Y axis, two on the X axis, and two more on the Z axis. She said the motors are LDO, and she got an extra Ender 3 board from a friend to run it all. The machine also requires a second power supply, which is just laying randomly under the printer.

The hotend is especially interesting, and canpush plastic faster than silly string. It’s a Trianglelab STD6 with a ceramic heating core, two extensions and a .4 CHT Volcano nozzle. A recent test clocked the flow rate at 120mm/s³. She’s hoping to get even more out of it by switching to a CHT V6 extender and a .5 Volcano nozzle.

McWuff is using OrcaSlicer, and though Speed Boat Rules have restrictions on layer height and line widths, there’s plenty of wiggle room in other settings. She said the gcode is modified by hand so she can alter the temperature from 235 degrees for the first layer, 265 for the hull, then 215 for the cabin and 200 to finish. The print speed tops out at 800 mm/s for infill and inner walls, with an acceleration rate of 50,000mm/s². That’s five times faster than aBambu Lab A1.

A complete tour of the printer is onMonika’s YouTube channel here.

We’ve clocked a fewfast Benchies at Tom’s Hardware, but since we’re testing stock printers and standard slicers settings, none have pushed plastic faster than theK1 Maxwith it’s 13 minute, 50 second Benchy.

For reference, a stockEnder 3 Prorunning at it’s normal 50mm/s and using Speed Boat settings can print a Benchy in one hour and four minutes. With high-speed, Klipper firmware installed, the stock machine can comfortably run at 150mm/s and print a Benchy in 42 minutes.

Denise Bertacchi is a Contributing Writer for Tom’s Hardware US, covering 3D printing. Denise has been crafting with PCs since she discovered Print Shop had clip art on her Apple IIe. She loves reviewing 3D printers because she can mix all her passions: printing, photography, and writing.