fitgap

3DXpert

Features
Ease of use
Ease of management
Quality of support
Affordability
Market presence
Take the quiz to check if 3DXpert and its alternatives fit your requirements.
Pricing from
Free Trial unavailable
Free version unavailable
User corporate size
Small
Medium
Large
User industry
  1. Manufacturing
  2. Construction
  3. Professional services (engineering, legal, consulting, etc.)

What is 3DXpert

3DXpert is an industrial additive manufacturing (AM) software platform used to prepare, optimize, and generate build data for metal and polymer 3D printing. It supports workflows such as part orientation, support generation, build preparation, and toolpath/slicing for production-focused AM. The product is typically used by manufacturing engineers and service bureaus that need tighter control over print preparation and process parameters than entry-level slicers. It is positioned as an end-to-end AM build preparation environment rather than a general-purpose CAD modeler.

pros

End-to-end AM build preparation

3DXpert consolidates common additive manufacturing preparation steps into a single environment, including orientation, support creation, and build layout. This reduces reliance on multiple tools for moving from 3D model to printer-ready build data. It is designed for production workflows where repeatability and process control matter. The scope is broader than basic desktop slicers that focus mainly on slicing and printer settings.

Advanced support and build tools

The software provides dedicated tools for generating and editing supports and for managing build setup at the plate/build level. These capabilities help users tailor supports and layouts to specific part geometries and manufacturing constraints. It is suited to complex parts where manual refinement is required. This can be important for metal AM and other processes where support strategy affects post-processing and part quality.

Industrial process parameter control

3DXpert is oriented toward controlling manufacturing-relevant parameters and producing printer-ready output for industrial equipment. It supports workflows where engineers need to manage build strategies and validate preparation steps before printing. This aligns with regulated or high-value production contexts where traceability and consistency are priorities. It generally targets more demanding requirements than hobbyist-focused modeling or lightweight preparation tools.

cons

Steeper learning curve

Because it covers a broad AM preparation workflow, new users often face more complexity than with entry-level slicers. Teams may need training to use support editing, build setup, and process controls effectively. This can slow initial adoption for organizations without dedicated AM engineering resources. It is less suited to casual or occasional printing needs.

Less emphasis on general CAD

3DXpert focuses on additive manufacturing preparation rather than being a full mechanical CAD system. Users typically still rely on separate CAD tools for primary design and detailed parametric modeling. This can add handoffs in the workflow if an organization expects a single design-to-print tool. It is strongest after the design is already created.

Industrial pricing and deployment fit

The product is generally positioned for industrial use cases, which can imply higher licensing and implementation costs than consumer or prosumer tools. Smaller teams may find the total cost harder to justify if they only need basic slicing and printer management. IT and process requirements can also be heavier in production environments. This can limit suitability for lightweight desktop printing scenarios.

Seller details

Oqton (a 3D Systems company)
Ghent, Belgium
2017
Subsidiary
https://oqton.com/
https://x.com/oqton
https://www.linkedin.com/company/oqton/

Tools by Oqton (a 3D Systems company)

3DXpert

Best 3DXpert alternatives

Autodesk Fusion
Ultimaker Cura
Slic3r
Materialise Magics
See all alternatives

Popular categories

All categories