I can't believe I'm saying this, but this is by far the cleanest nozzle swapping solution so far. A clear INDX clone but features the #1 user requested modification: Rear mounted tools. This allows you to actually see what you are printing and intervein as needed.
2026 is going to be a crazy year for toolchangers!
This is everything I know about the Creality KliTek nozzle changing system so far:
Creality has started teasing something called KliTek, described as:
“Next-Gen Nozzle Changing”
“Colors · Materials · Print-in-Place”
Based on the teaser image, this does not look like a normal filament changer. It looks like Creality may be working on a system that physically changes nozzles, hotends, or nozzle modules during a print.
That matters because most current multi-color systems still push every filament through the same nozzle. That means purge waste, color contamination, extra print time, and limitations when mixing very different materials.
A nozzle-changing system could potentially solve some of those issues by letting the printer switch to a different nozzle path instead of constantly flushing material through one shared nozzle.
The wording is also interesting. Colors suggests multi-color printing. Materials suggests more serious multi-material support. Print-in-place suggests they may be targeting functional prints, assembled mechanisms, flexible/rigid combinations, support materials, or parts that use different material properties in one print.
What we do not know yet:
- How many nozzles it supports
- Whether it swaps nozzles, full hotends, or tool modules
- What printers it will work with
- Whether this is an upgrade or part of a new machine
- How much purge it actually eliminates
- How reliable it will be
- When it launches
- What it will cost
My personal read:
This looks like Creality’s next big move toward competing with the next generation of multi-material 3D printing. Not just “more colors,” but potentially a cleaner way to print different materials without relying entirely on purge towers and filament flushing.
But until we see the mechanism actually running, it is still just a teaser. The idea is exciting, but the execution is everything. Nozzle changing sounds amazing on paper, but it has to be fast, accurate, reliable, and easy enough for normal users to live with.
If Creality pulls this off, KliTek could be a very interesting answer to the current AMS/CFS-style systems and maybe even a step toward more affordable toolchanger-like printing.
For now, I’m cautiously excited.
This could be big.