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Sovol SV07

$259

Reviewed by PrintTuner Engineering Team · Last updated May 2026

Brand Sovol
Type FDM
Build Volume 220 x 220 x 250 mm
Max Nozzle Temp 300°C
Max Bed Temp 100°C
Max Speed 500 mm/s
Nozzle 0.4 mm
Extruder Direct Drive
Auto Level Yes
Enclosure No
Release Year 2023

The SV07 was one of the first budget Klipper bedslingers, arriving before Elegoo and Creality had their own Klipper budget machines. It comes pre-assembled with Klipper’s input shaping and pressure advance, a planetary-gear direct drive extruder, and a PEI flexible bed. In 2025, it faces stiffer competition from the Ender 3 V3 ($199 with CoreXZ) and Neptune 4 Pro ($259 with linear rail X), but at discounted prices it remains a reasonable entry into Klipper-based printing.

What It Does Well

The planetary-gear extruder provides more torque than standard single-gear direct drives. For flexible filaments and materials that require consistent extrusion pressure (wood PLA, metal-fill), the planetary gear reduces skipping under load. At 500mm/s on PLA, the torque advantage keeps extrusion consistent where lighter extruders skip.

Klipper with pre-tuned input shaping is functional out of the box. The 500mm/s capability with consistent resonance compensation was a meaningful distinction from Marlin-based machines when the SV07 launched.

Pre-assembled with a flexible PEI magnetic bed. The bed adhesion is reliable and part removal after cooling is simple. No glass bed alignment or BuildTak maintenance.

Where It Falls Short

220×220mm is standard and no longer a competitive differentiator. The Neptune 4 Pro at the same price offers linear rail X axis improvement. The Ender 3 V3 at $40 less offers CoreXZ motion.

Bedslinger Y-axis design means the bed moves in Y at speed. At 500mm/s on tall narrow prints, bed inertia causes artifacts that CoreXY and CoreXZ designs avoid. Reduce print speed on tall narrow prints to 200–300mm/s.

The Sovol community is smaller than Creality’s. Troubleshooting resources, community print profiles, and modification documentation are available but thinner.

100°C max bed temperature limits ABS and ASA to borderline adhesion. The hardware technically supports both materials but the open frame makes large-part warping the real constraint, not bed temperature.

Materials

PLA and PLA+: 215–220°C, 60°C bed. The default profile from Sovol is a reasonable starting point. The planetary gear extruder performs well at 300–500mm/s on PLA.

PETG: 240–245°C, 70°C bed, fan 40%. Reduce outer wall speed to 100mm/s for surface quality. PETG adhesion is good on the PEI surface at 70°C — apply PVA release coat if parts bond too aggressively.

TPU (95A): 220°C, 25mm/s, retraction 0.5mm or off. The planetary gear drive provides more consistent grip on soft filament than standard extruders. Flexible prints at 25mm/s are reliable.

Wood PLA: 190–210°C for light tone, 215–220°C for darker. The planetary extruder’s higher torque is helpful for wood fiber composites that occasionally cause pressure spikes. Use a 0.5mm nozzle if available for reduced clog risk.

vs. the Competition

Creality Ender 3 V3 ($199): CoreXZ motion (cleaner at speed), same 220mm bed, $60 less, larger community. For most users, the V3 is the better choice at a lower price.

Elegoo Neptune 4 Pro ($259): Linear rail X axis, same Klipper setup, 225mm bed, same price. The Neptune 4 Pro’s linear rail produces cleaner walls at high speeds. The SV07’s planetary extruder is the counter-advantage.

Anycubic Kobra X ($229): CoreXY motion, 220mm bed, $30 less. CoreXY produces fewer artifacts at speed than a bedslinger. The SV07’s planetary extruder doesn’t compensate for the motion system difference.

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