this post was submitted on 16 Jun 2023
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If only there was some way I could have known to try this sooner! /s

Story: I wanted to try printing with petg, since I've read how much easier it is. But with a new roll I just had a really hard time. Lots of stringing, poor adhesion, and it just seemed like no amount of my usual fiddling would really make it better.

Somewhere I read that even new filament can benefit from drying, because maybe it wasn't stored in the best way, or maybe it's older than you think. I also read about putting the roll on the print bed, heating it up and covering it for a long time, since I don't have a filament dryer. I did that for about half a day, and then sealed the roll in a ziptop bag with a silica packet because I needed a break from it. A week later and, it seems much better!?

Either the drying, the break, or something else seems to have helped a lot! Happy printing everyone.

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[–] Drudge@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I had the same experience...someone on the BK Discord shared this link, which I found pretty interesting https://fillamentum.com/pages/drying-filaments-before-processing/

Key take-away: cooling the filament after drying needs to be done in a controlled environment, i.e. put it in a zip lock bag with desiccant immediately after its taken out of the heat.

I have used my oven on the lowest temp but it really stinks up the house. I just realized that my food dehydrator basically does the same thing...worked out awesome

[–] galaxi@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

PETG is truly a pain!! You'd think with a plastic used in water bottles, it would do better with moisture. I recommend the brand CC3D if you want something reliable (and ultra cheap!) Also remember that PETG needs more room between the nozzle and the build plate (higher z offset) so that the filament doesn't stick to the nozzle and make a mess :)

[–] boothin@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Think about what happens to water if it's heated above 100C... it turns into steam! The more water there is in the plastic the more steam there will be, causing the various issues like bubbling. The release of steam also means some of the heat is not being absorbed by the filament, leading to temperature issues as it exits the nozzle

[–] bigredgiraffe@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I have found the same, especially with PETG and PA. I even live in a fairly dry climate (Colorado, USA) and the normal air humidity is low (15-30% is not in common) so I figured it would be okay but nope! Huge differences in print quality and layer adhesion. PLA seems to not be remotely as picky but it does help.

[–] nyan@lemmy.cafe 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You're starting to make me think that my own PETG issues may be due to more than my laziness about fine-tuning after all. Time to break out the dryer (which I've previously only used with PVB, another one of those highly hygroscopic materials).

[–] zipsglacier@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Good luck to you! Let us know if it works out. (If not, just keep that to yourself!)