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how to deal with old filament

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    A Former User @mrehorstdmd
    last edited by 19 Jul 2020, 17:08

    @mrehorstdmd that might not be a problem for everyone (welcome to the (other) frozen shi***le of hoth, to qoute ave) but I get what you're saying

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      arhi @mrehorstdmd
      last edited by 19 Jul 2020, 17:14

      @mrehorstdmd said in how to deal with old filament:

      don't take a chance on printing it with PLA. How may objects can you guarantee won't be left in a hot car at some point in their lifetime?

      PLA has a bad vibe about temperature but really it's not that worse than other plastic we use. If we talk hot beverages PETG/ABS/HIPS deform too at 90C. IIRC mithbusters shown well over 100C in a car during summer, so again PETG/ABS/HIPS will not do much better. I have PETG from Dasfilament (and I heard from others on this forum with other brands of PETG too) that prints ok at 190C so again not much better than PLA. There's a lot of talk about how PLA is crap and I fell into that trap myself and did not use PLA for many years but in reality, for many purposes PLA is IDEAL material to print with.

      undefined 1 Reply Last reply 19 Jul 2020, 18:01 Reply Quote 0
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        mrehorstdmd @arhi
        last edited by mrehorstdmd 19 Jul 2020, 18:01

        @arhi I don't know about mythbusters, but I lived in Phoenix for a few years and the plastic parts of my car, primarily ABS (maybe a different formulation than we print with), never melted, and neither did the bracket for holding my GPS unit or the GPS unit's housing. OK, no boiling water in printed plastic cups, that's easily avoided, since prints are usually not watertight anyway. I'd worry more about boiling water leaking on my hands and burning me more than I'd worry about the cup melting. I have put ABS prints in my dishwasher for a few cycles and they came out unscathed.

        I'm not sure how well PETG holds up in a hot car. Maybe not much different than PLA. I'll go put a print out in my car now and see how it goes.

        https://drmrehorst.blogspot.com/

        undefined 1 Reply Last reply 19 Jul 2020, 18:48 Reply Quote 0
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          arhi @mrehorstdmd
          last edited by 19 Jul 2020, 18:48

          @mrehorstdmd I lived in LA for a year, ABS holder for a nokia phone (not printed but injection m.) was bent beyond recognition. HDPE cup colder too (not the factory one). Here in Belgrade we have 43-45C days during summer, never measured temperature inside the car but have PLA parts that survived years (I did not expect them to), I often mention my PLA holder for external thermometer sitting outside for 7th year now, direct sunlight, easily over 60C during summer, easily -20 during winter (not every winter, not every day but) and is still going strong like day1, it is not colored any more, color is gone, but the part itself changed less than the plastic casing of the wireless sensor itself. You need 180+ for PLA to really make a mess, it will lose strength and bend at high temps but so will most other thermoplastics, that's why most of the stuff in your car is made from PC or better; pet, abs, hips... not that much

          Anyhow PLA is not that "pure" material, there is PLA and there is PLA so...

          What's much more important than temperature resistance of thermoplasts is this difference in aging of filament vs printed parts. It's different - A LOT different and I don't see a reason why

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            oliof @mrehorstdmd
            last edited by 19 Jul 2020, 20:12

            @mrehorstdmd I am not printing printer parts in PLA -- sorry if I was being unclear. I am reasonably fine with PETG parts, but I'm gravitating towards ASA more and more.

            <>RatRig V-Minion Fly Super5Pro RRF<> V-Core 3.1 IDEX k*****r <> RatRig V-Minion SKR 2 Marlin<>

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              TypQxQ
              last edited by 19 Jul 2020, 21:56

              I also have problems with the PLA becoming brittle inside a PTFE tube. It's different between different brands. EasyPrint from 3D Prima is worst I have, It's enough for it to be left half a day inside PTFE and it's broken in several places.
              Generally all materials get brittle when they absorb moisture and I dry even my PLA for better end results.

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                arhi
                last edited by 20 Dec 2020, 08:47

                problems again, opened 7+ year old box of ABS ... behaves like crap .. does not crumble like PLA but it's rather unprintable ... 24h in dehumidifier at 70C, did not help, still unprintable.... I don't get it, was never exposed to UV, in original vacuum bag with desicant, no water... also does not print like wet filament it just behaves weird - poor layer adhesion, mega warping, curling out of the nozzle...

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                  DaBit
                  last edited by 20 Dec 2020, 10:04

                  At the start of the covid-19 pandemic I used several old rolls of eSun ABS that were never stored properly to print faceshields. I did dry them before using as insurance policy, and had no single issue with them. Printed like new.

                  The advantage of ABS was that I was able to heat all the faceshields I printed to 80C, making sure that no virus was alive on the shipped parts.

                  undefined 1 Reply Last reply 20 Dec 2020, 11:40 Reply Quote 0
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                    arhi @DaBit
                    last edited by 20 Dec 2020, 11:40

                    @DaBit this was also eSUN and also ABS ... only around 8 years old I think and it was in the pile with PC and PA so that's why it was unnoticed for a while

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                      DigiD
                      last edited by 22 Dec 2020, 00:26

                      This looks similar to a problem experienced in the UV ink print industry when printing older new media vs fresh new media ( both never used and in sealed bags) plastizers in the older media migrate to the print surface causing unexpected print results .

                      Turns out PLA uses all kinds of plastizers as well and they also can change wildly over time depending on what plastizer is actually used , which may explain what your experiencing

                      I went down a rabbit hole of info , this one was an interesting read

                      Printability, Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Poly(3-Hydroxybutyrate)-Poly(Lactic Acid)-Plasticizer Blends for Three-Dimensional (3D) Printing

                      undefined 1 Reply Last reply 22 Dec 2020, 01:11 Reply Quote 1
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                        mendenmh @DigiD
                        last edited by 22 Dec 2020, 01:11

                        @DigiD said in how to deal with old filament:

                        Printability, Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Poly(3-Hydroxybutyrate)-Poly(Lactic Acid)-Plasticizer Blends for Three-Dimensional (3D) Printing

                        The article you point to seems to indicate the plasticizers were needed in the PHB/PLA mixes, which are extra-biodegradable mixes. In those mixes, they behaved badly without plasticizers. I didn't see anything in there saying pure PLA has plasticizers. As far as I know it doesn't. Anyone an expert on this?

                        On the other had, I have had a few spools of PLA go completely brittle. It's been more a problem with 3mm diameter filament, which is already very stiff, and I think a bit of differential embrittlement of the outer shell makes it useless.

                        undefined 1 Reply Last reply 22 Dec 2020, 03:00 Reply Quote 0
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                          Phaedrux Moderator @mendenmh
                          last edited by 22 Dec 2020, 03:00

                          @mendenmh I would bet the PLA+ blends have more plasticizer.

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                            arhi
                            last edited by 22 Dec 2020, 03:37

                            I have some 11 year old natural PLA from bitsfrombytes, 3mm dia, that you can't unspool 😄 .. it does not crack as easy as some modern old PLA but is hardened so much you can't uncoil and straighten it .. I did manage to print with it using a heat gun to heat it up while unspooling but is a manual process acceptable for test only, not for actual printing; it's only total of maybe 500g so not really a big deal (when I remember how much I paid for it it hurts) ... but this last issue was with ABS. Not sure why this happens. I seen few times in videos of ppl like Tomas or Joel that they mention "these are old spools of filament that is unprintable" so they too have the issue of - after some time on the shell filament is unusable, but why ?!

                            Also, what's weird, as I already mentioned, I have pieces printed out of PLA that are 10 years old and still are totally ok, never became brittle?! Why does filament becomes extra brittle and week while printed part does not ?!

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