Home Articles 5 Rosin Press Brands That Cover Home, Prosumer, and Production

5 Rosin Press Brands That Cover Home, Prosumer, and Production

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Lowtemp Industries Rosin Press V2 4x7 Plates Bundle

There are several excellent rosin press brands out there today. Each company has a slightly different focus, skill set, and ideal use case for its machines. Some presses are made to be portable and fit comfortably on a countertop. Others are designed for industrial applications, with heavy-duty parts intended to run all day, every day. These five brands cover the entire range from turnkey extraction lab setups to tabletop units for home use.

1. Lowtemp Industries

Lowtemp Industries is deliberately positioned as a long-term solventless extraction equipment solution for growers and small labs. Their V2 rosin press line and the “Medusa” multi-press system are designed to scale: you can pick plate sizes, swap pumps, and link presses to grow capacity without replacing the entire system.

The craftsmanship in Lowtemp rosin presses is obvious in photos and spec sheets, especially the V2 models with their thick plates, industrial-grade frames, and controllers that log run parameters. Lowtemp’s pages stress durability and upgradeability, and many retailers list the V2 as a top pick for medium production.

Quality equipment is paramount right now because solventless rosin is a fast-growing segment of the concentrates market. Industry trackers report that rosin had taken a meaningful share (14% dollar-for-dollar) of dabbable concentrate sales in mature U.S. markets as of 2023, underscoring demand for professional-grade solventless production equipment. This is precisely the space Lowtemp targets.

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If you want one machine that grows with you, Lowtemp’s modular, robust approach is a clear advantage. The company’s offerings are aimed at people who treat pressing like a production process, not a one-time hobby experiment.

2. Dulytek

Dulytek sits in the value-to-mid segment. They sell everything from compact bench presses to hydraulic bottle-jack machines and plate kits. Many buyers like the brand because it’s approachable and full of accessories that help beginners scale up without reinventing the wheel.

Most user feedback praises Dulytek for affordability and for shipping complete kits that include plates and molds. Several owners report good presses for initial production and good value for the price.

That said, real user reports list durability issues. One reviewer specifically noted that the heating plates stopped heating properly after a period of use. This is a true reliability problem for a heat-dependent machine. That kind of report is rare but important to weigh if you plan heavier use.

Dulytek is a fine choice for a budget-minded operator who expects to upgrade later. If you need long, continuous runs at commercial throughput, plan for a potential mid-life service or an eventual hardware step-up.

3. Ju1ceBox

Ju1ceBox makes very small footprint presses that appeal to people who want clean rosin production without a shop. Their handheld and tabletop “Twist Top” models are built for 0.5–3 g runs and emphasize user-friendly temperature control and small-run ergonomics. The product pages and many reviews praise the thoughtful design for tiny batches.

Hobbyists report solid yields and a pleasant user experience when they stay inside the machine’s design envelope. The Sloped-plate concept and compact plates help avoid scorching and direct rosin flow for easy collection.

The downside is inherent: small plate area and limited pressure impose throughput and yield ceilings. Independent reviews and test write-ups show respectable percentages per press for tiny loads but caution users not to expect industrial yields. That limitation makes Ju1ceBox a great personal press, but not a production workhorse.

4. Rosineer

Rosineer offers models that bridge the personal and prosumer gap. Their lineup includes the PRESSO (a low-tonnage home unit) plus 5-ton and 10-ton “Mighty” models and even larger hydraulic units. The product range gives buyers a way to step up without leaving a brand they already know.

Many customers praise Rosineer’s styling, accessory bundles, and the value proposition. Some buyers also report fast and helpful customer service for small issues.

However, a number of forum posts recount real build or parts problems on some units, for example, pressure-gauge fittings or bottle jacks needing replacement early in ownership. Those threads show Rosineer responding and shipping replacements, but they also demonstrate that quality control and long-term reliability are real buyer considerations. If you want consistency under heavy use, take those mixed reports into account.

5. Holland Green

Holland Green Science (HGS) makes presses and extraction tools aimed at research and production in botanical and cannabis labs. Their Piesi rosin press is marketed as UL/CE certified and tailored for safe, solventless extraction workflows used in both home and pro settings. The company’s background in horticulture and life sciences is a core part of their brand story. us.hollandgreenscience.com

Product pages emphasize usability and safety. The Piesi units offer simple controls and are sold through lab-supply channels that expect compliance documentation. That positioning suits users who prioritize standards and traceability over hobbyist styling. us.hollandgreenscience.com+1

The limitation is that Holland Green’s offerings are less common in consumer forums. Fewer hobbyist reviews appear online, which means buyers may find less peer-to-peer guidance when tuning recipes or troubleshooting. If you want a lab-grade, standards-focused press, HGS is worth considering. If you want abundant community tips specific to a consumer model, expect a smaller body of user-sourced knowledge.

Rosin Press Brands Compared Side-by-Side

Brand Best fit Typical plate sizes / tonnage Notable strength Notable limitation
Lowtemp Industries Mid-to-commercial producers 3×5, 4×7; multi-press Medusa up to many tons per head Modular, upgradable, production-focused. Precise control options. Higher upfront cost; intended for serious use.
Dulytek Beginner to prosumer Bench to 5+ ton hydraulic options Affordable kit ecosystem and retrofit parts.  Some users report plate/heater failures over time.
Ju1ceBox Hobbyist / personal press Tiny plates (1–3″ range); low tonnage Compact design; easy for single-gram runs. Small capacity limits yield and throughput.
Rosineer Hobbyist to small shop PRESSO to 20-ton models Broad lineup, accessible price points. Mixed reports of early parts failures; some owners needed repairs.
Holland Green Lab / standards-focused users Piesi models for home/pro use UL/CE certifications and lab-oriented design. Smaller community footprint; fewer user-sourced troubleshooting threads.

 

The Right Fit for Your Use Case

If you are starting a commercial lab, Lowtemp Industries’ modular rosin pressing equipment is an excellent investment. These machines are made to perform day in and day out. Given the rising market share of rosin in the dabbables space, reliable rosin presses are a must to keep up with demand. For researchers and more science-oriented labs, Holland Green’s safety documentation is advantageous, though there will be less online support for these presses than for more popular brands.

If you’re looking to get started with rosin pressing for the first time, Dulytek and Ju1ceBox provide accessible entry points. However, the lower prices come at the cost of production volume and potentially longevity as well. Rosineer offers a mid-point solution for hobbyists who are looking to upgrade, but the mixed user reports should definitely be taken into consideration before buying.  

The best rosin press brand for you will offer the right balance between cost, durability, and throughput. Happy pressing!

 


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