I found a small length of filament in the parts bin. I don’t know what it is, and nobody else here does, or remembers ordering it. I’m pretty sure it’s a sample that was sent by Prusa when we ordered the printer, and it’s probably not a special material.

It’s feels “gummy” and a lot softer than PLA, but not really rubbery either. And I tried printing something with it at 230C as if it was PLA and it’s clearly not hot enough: it’s able to flow out of the nozzle but it barely sticks to the bed.

Any idea what it could be?

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    Well, if we’re ruling out PET and PETG – PET would probably require the temperatures you describe and would be impervious to acetone, as well as extremely flexible – there is an outside possibility it could be HDPE.

    HDPE filament is damn rare, though, and I’d doubt anyone would be giving it away as samples given how difficult it’d be to print with most consumer machines. HDPE’s signature tell is that it feels somewhat waxy if you e.g. scrape at it with your fingernail.

  • j4k3@lemmy.worldM
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    22 days ago

    TPU if it is soft and like gummy/rubbery

    I use the stuff for seals some times, but more often it makes the perfect string for cat toys. Put a length on a stick, add some painter’s tape on the end, and wave it around; cats go nuts.

  • KickMeElmo@sopuli.xyz
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    22 days ago

    Need to know what material your build plate is made of to guess what wouldn’t stick to it.

  • ExtremeDullard@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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    22 days ago

    Well, I toyed with the printer’s temperature settings until I found a combination of nozzle temperature and bed temperature that finally made it spew out parts without making a disaster.

    It seems to flow best at 260C, but then when it lands on the bed, it immediately shrinks as it cools and the part curls up and comes unstuck. I had to lower the temperature to 245C and raise the bed temperature to the maximum this printer does - 110C - for the part to stick enough to complete.

    The nozzle clearly isn’t hot enough because some layers on the final parts look like they’re about to delaminate. But any hotter than that and the material curls up. And it doesn’t matter what bed plate I use: that stuff doesn’t seem to stick to anything properly.

    I printed spectacles with that mystery filament. You can see how floppy it is here:

    https://toobnix.org/w/qJJ1htb9eqmiHx7gSpq2RT

    It looks like TPU alright, but the temperatures involved aren’t really typical of TPU. Also, acetone does nothing to it whatsoever.

    The material also doesn’t like to be filed or sanded, and the best results for a nice finish without bits of material sticking out all over the place is to “polish” it by running a very sharp x-acto blade across the surface until all the junk is gone and the surface is shiny.

    Weird filament. Kind of useless…

    • Stampela@startrek.website
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      22 days ago

      You might have some polypropylene there. Really strong material! Won’t stick to shit, temperature resistant, chemical resistant, can bend without breaking… never tried it, personally but it’s interesting stuff.

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        And notwithtanding that the damn stuff is around $78 for a kilo of filament! My other guess was polyethylene (HDPE). These two are pretty similar mechanically, both being polyolefins, but polypropylene melts at a higher temperature.

        • EmilieEvans@lemmy.ml
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          21 days ago

          Yeah. PP doesn’t stick at all to PEI print beds. Issue is Prusa neither sells HDPE or PP. Neither do they sell printer cable of Printing these materials (build surface).

          For Polypropylene: e.g. Eryone is 26€ for 900g (should be more “length”/volume than 1kg of PLA). Fiberlogy is 50€/kg. Not that expensive without the Prusa tax.

    • IMALlama@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      It might be TPU too. I’ve used it to print function tires and the random deformable fidget.