Staff Answer
Jul 13, 2026 - 02:47 PM
The xTool O1 competes with several compact UV printers, but its most important advantage is the range of configurations available—including a version that combines UV and fabric printing.
| Model | Approximate Working Area | Maximum Object Height | Key Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| xTool O1 Omni | 330 × 420 mm | 150 mm | Available in single UV, dual UV and UV + fabric configurations |
| eufyMake E1 | Approximately 330 × 420 mm | Approximately 100 mm | Compact UV platform with single XP600 printhead |
| OMTech Spectra A3+ | 350 × 450 mm | Approximately 140 mm | Larger working area and dual XP600 printheads, but UV-focused |
| Procolored X ONE | 297 × 420 mm | 150 mm | UV and laser hybrid concept rather than UV and fabric |
All four are listed at up to 720 × 1440 dpi, so resolution alone does not tell the full story. The larger differences are printhead configuration, sensing and positioning technology, software, maintenance, object clearance and supported applications.
The O1 offers a CIS contact image sensor combined with a line laser for fast placement and measurement, app-based monitoring, automated ink circulation and moisture protection, a closed ink system, and a maximum object height of 150 mm. It also supports raised UV textures up to 7 mm and includes a built-in air-purification system rated at 96.4% TVOC removal under laboratory conditions.
The biggest competitive distinction is the UV + DT Fabric Edition. The eufyMake E1 and OMTech Spectra are primarily UV printers, while the Procolored X ONE emphasizes a UV-and-laser hybrid. The O1 is the more relevant choice for a customer who wants UV hard-goods printing and apparel capability from the same compact platform.
Specifications, estimated speeds and competitive features are based on manufacturer information available at launch and may change. Actual production speed depends on print mode, resolution, white ink, varnish, texture layers and artwork coverage.
