I watched a 3D printing youtuber say that Adam Savage said 20% but 10% is what he uses.

I have never seen my sunlu dryer show anything bellow 23% even after days of use and I have no idea how to achieve 10 without cooking the filament.

  • @GhostlyPixel@lemmy.world
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    610 months ago

    I live in a really dry climate, so I don’t really notice issues unless I have a spool out on the printer for months, and even then dust is more of an issue than humidity.

    To be safe, I bought a storage bin with a gasket on the lid that I store all of my other spools in, and that has seemed to work great.

    • ShadowRam
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      10 months ago

      Yeah… I’ve been printing now for 11 years…

      I’ve submerged PLA in water overnight and then printed it to prove humidity has no effect on PLA.

      PLA doesn’t give a shit about humidity and never has. All the early days of 3D Printing that used Nylon needed drying out.

      Even early days PLA getting brittle was about strain fatigue on the filament and nothing to do with humidity. But modern day PLA these days doesn’t suffer from those old school issues anymore.

      Dust will cause more issues than humidity.

      • Rikudou_SageA
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        39 months ago

        I’ve had issues with wet PLA filament that were solved immediately by drying it.

        • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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          19 months ago

          Likewise, I have had PLA get brittle and snap on the way to the extruder when left loaded on the printer and exposed in my basement for extended periods, but this behavior disappears after I bake it in the filament dryer, even on the same spool.

          • ShadowRam
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            29 months ago

            You solved that via annealing and releasing the stress in the PLA, not by drying it.

        • ShadowRam
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          19 months ago

          What issues? Brittleness?

          You solved that via annealing and releasing the stress in the PLA, not by drying it.

          • @DreadPotato@sopuli.xyz
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            9 months ago

            I’ve had bad stringing before with PLA, drying it made it go away completely with the exact same print settings and model.

            I’d argue that the vast amount of (recent, not only older) resources available online showing similar experiences to mine disproves your statement that PLA has no issues with moisture retention.

      • @callcc@lemmy.world
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        29 months ago

        That’s interesting. I’ve never noticed issues either but then again I usually keep the spools in sealed abgs with silica

  • @stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca
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    610 months ago

    I store my PLA and PETG in the bags they come in and have never done anything past that because I’ve never had an issue. I think people are far too concerned about filament being dry over a few filaments where it is actually important like Nylon.

    • @Fisk400@feddit.nuOP
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      510 months ago

      It depends on what you print. I print a lot of small things with intricate details and I absolutely notice when spring and summer rolls around and the filament gets wetter.

  • @ScottE@lemm.ee
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    510 months ago

    I just put it in my dryer at 40C for a few hours with little regard to a target humidity. I also live in a dry climate where the ambient humidity is low, so maybe it’s not enough in wetter climates, but this works for me.

  • @lemmyman@lemmy.world
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    510 months ago

    23% is really just the bottom range of what your dryer will report. My dryer is 15%. Who knows what it really is below that, and whether those numbers are even accurate?

    But after a day of drying at 50C you PLA will be bone dry regardless of what the dryer reports.

  • @al177@lemmy.sdf.org
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    510 months ago

    Try running your dryer with the lid propped open a bit. Most Sunlu dryers don’t have a way to get rid of the humid air pulled out of the filament.

    • @Fisk400@feddit.nuOP
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      510 months ago

      This made an enormous difference. I kept the lid open a crack and the moisture dropped bellow 20 within an hour. The room RH is 30 btw.

      • @al177@lemmy.sdf.org
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        110 months ago

        Yep. I can get ASA down to 12% with an ambient 50%RH using that method.

        There are some models out there for wedges with reverse Bowden fittings so you can keep it cracked open all the time.

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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    39 months ago

    As close to zero as is functionally possible. There’s no benefit in not shooting for that target, even if it is unlikely you will actually fully achieve it.

    I store my rolls in a tote with a gasketed lid, with a generous amount of silica gel desiccant. Whatever spool is in use I feed directly out of a heated filament dryer.

  • @EmilieEvans@lemmy.ml
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    110 months ago

    Like everything in life: Depends.

    A roll that will be gone within a few weeks? Don’t care.

    Long-term storage (exotics)? Vacuum packaging.

    Regular but will be open for months? No clue. My Xiaomi temperature & hydrometer go to 0%. In a nutshell, just throw orange gel in a watertight box and replace it once it starts turning colourless/green.

  • @PlasticExistence@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    20% should be perfectly fine. I can’t get mine less than that without extreme effort, and it doesn’t perform better at that percentage anyway.

    I dry mine in a food dehydrator and print with it in one of the filament dryers to keep it dry during long prints. I live in a swamp though, so it’s necessary for me to do this before almost every print.

  • @itsmect@monero.town
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    19 months ago

    A lot of people here commented “I do X and it works for me”, but I do not think that is good advice. While it might work fine for that person, there are too many variables that are ignored. Ambient humidity, filament type, printer model, slicer settings, model geometry/details - all of this has an impact on the final print quality.

    A more controlled environment removes variables and therefor makes the print result more predictable. Drying filament and storing it properly takes a bit of effort, but it is easy step towards better results.

    You don’t even need a dedicated dryer, just use your printers headbed, put 1-3 spools on it and a cardboard box with a few vent holes on top. Set the temperature according to the filament and let it run for 8 hours. Afterwards put the spools into a sealed container (4L cereal box works great), add some silica gel and your done. When it cools back down the relative humidity drops below 10% RH, which is so low that most hygrometers wont even measure it.

    I’m casually printing PETG at 260°C, over 20mm³/s (about 300mm/s) and archive reproducible near perfect results with next to no stringing. With bare PLA drying may not matter, I’ve too little experience to give a definitive answer. If you have any composite filament (wood, carbon, sparkle, etc) you definitely should dry it anyway, because you do not know how much the filler changes the properties.

    Oh and finally: I place new spools in containers with dry air (a tiny bit of silica gel in them) and measure the equalized humidity after a few days. Most spools were delivered with a humidity of 15-20% RH