As I’m graduating college in a few weeks, I’ll be losing access to my university’s free printers and filament. I’m going to build up a home lab with a couple printers where I can make goofy little mechanical projects as well as some components for my cars and stuff.

Who’s your go-to for PLA and ABS/ASA filaments? Those will be my primary print jobs in any serious volume. I know our college’s club has had hella problems with random chinese brand filaments not printing consistently but I also don’t want to spend $30+ per kg for something like Prusament.

  • @neclimdul@lemmy.world
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    31 year ago

    Had great luck with polymaker and find they’re in the sweet spot of predictable quality and price for me.

  • Dettweiler
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    11 year ago

    I’ve been using Creality’s hyper PLA. It’s pretty good quality and my printer/slicer combo has presets that are 95% what I want (I tweak the print and bed temps as needed). I’m using an Ender 3 V3 KE for reference.

  • @IMALlama@lemmy.world
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    61 year ago

    I’ve printed a decent amount of PETG from both Push Plastic and Atomic Filament. Both have been very solid/reliable, but I would probably give an edge to Atomic as far as quality. Their PETG has never let me down. On the ASA front, I’ve run around 9 kg of Polymaker ASA through my Voron with another 1.5 of blue and white sitting on two different 3kg spools. I ran 2 kg of their ASA through my i3 clone printing prints for my Voron. I haven’t had any problems with it, and it does occasionally go on sale for very attractive prices. I bought my last two spools on November 24th last year for $50.39 (for a 3 kg spool of blue) and $67.19 (for a 3 kg spool of white). Polymaker’s ASA does require what seems like a very low extrusion multiplier (I’m currently at 0.893), but you can print the stuff blazing fast in terms of mm^3/s.

    Now that I know that both Atomic Filament and Push Plastic offer ASA, I might give them a spin when I need a refill. I don’t go through that much filament and don’t mind spending a little extra $$ for something that could result in less headache. I also like supporting American companies/manufacturers where I can.

  • @bluewing@lemm.ee
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    111 months ago

    For PLA and PETG, I like MatterHacker, though I have been buying some Voxel PLA lately and that’s been pretty good stuff too. Voxel does run sales that get the price down to $15/$16US a kilo.

    For ABS/ASA, I’m still using a the same kilo of Zyltech ABS I bought 5 or 6 years ago. And I still haven’t used 200g yet. I did dig it out this weekend to print a couple dozen custom cable clips for my boat with it though.

  • @BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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    21 year ago

    In France I’m buying from ArianePlast. It’s good PLA for a decent price.

    I have not tried it but they also have “Eco” PLA at 13€/kg

  • @Tolookah@discuss.tchncs.de
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    121 year ago

    Microcenter’s Inland pla+ has been good to me. Microcenter used to ship it free, and they may still, but it’s been a bit since I ordered. It’s $15-20/kg. Some day I’ll use great filament and might call this stuff garbage, but I’m not there yet. The standard pla is less impressive, causes me more grief than I like.

    • @Thrashy@lemmy.world
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      51 year ago

      Inland is (or was, at least) relabeled eSun filament, and they’re considered a decent brand for basic filaments. I’ve only ever used their PLA(+) but it’s always been bulletproof.

  • @qwertilliopasd@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    In USA I usually get Printed solid’s Jesse and 3D Printing Canada’s Budget PLA. I also pick up a couple rolls of Inland any time I’m by my local Microcenter

    Filament sourcing is pretty region specific. Where are you buying from?

  • @th_in_gs@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    "Jinos 3D Filament” is pretty cheap. I started using them during the pandemic when it was hard to find PETG. Seem to be a small place in North Carolina that manufactures mostly for their own use? Sometimes they take a couple of days to ship.

    They sell mostly on eBay: https://www.ebay.com/itm/382556327412

    [Edit: Just re-read that you’re looking for ABS/ASA - I don’t think Jinos does those, unfortunately]

  • @morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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    11 year ago

    I bounced around a couple, my goal was to find stuff cheaper than prusament that also produced nice results. i really liked the stuff spool3d in Canada sells but ended up coming across matter3d as spool3d carries some of their products. They’re way cheaper than anything I can get on amazon and I found the quality up there.

    • JustEnoughDucks
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      61 year ago

      My favorite webshop tinytronics.nl (very little markup on their electronics unlike almost every competitor)

      And they have both Azurefilm and Devil Design. I was debating on which to try. Sounds like J should go devil design

      • @JustBrian7872@feddit.de
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        11 year ago

        Thanks for the tip with the shop (shipping is reasonable and electronic components are well priced)! Cannot help with Azurefilm filament as I haven’t tried it yet.