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Nylon Filament 1 by Polymaker Review

3

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Very good

Revainrating 4 out of 5  
Rating 
4.0
🖨️ 3D Printing Supplies, 🏭 Additive Manufacturing Products

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img 1 attached to Nylon Filament 1 by Polymaker
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Description of Nylon Filament 1 by Polymaker

🛠️ 【Strong & Tough】 - PolyMide CoPA Nylon filament 1.75 is made with Nylon 6 and Nylon 6.6 PA filament, which ensures outstanding mechanical strength and toughness, making it the best choice of engineering material for your creative ideas. 🏷️ 【Warp Free】 - Polymaker CoPA Nylon filament 1.75mm is engineered to give excellent dimensional stability during printing, with near-zero warping. 🐾 【Easy Printing】 - Unlike other Nylon filaments, our CoPA Nylon 3D printer filament 1.75 is extremely easy to work with and compatible with most filament-based 3D printers with no heated chamber/bed required. 🌡️ 【180°C Heat Resistant】 - With a best heat resistant performance(180°C Vicat Softening Temperature) in the market, our PolyMide CoPA Nylon 3D printing filament 1.75mm is a no brainer for very demanding mechanical parts such as gears, brackets or pipe connectors. 🧵 【Tangle Free & Resealable Bag】 - Our CoPA white nylon filament 1.75 is carefully winded to avoid any tangling issues, dried and vacuum sealed in a resealable ziplock bag with desiccant. Please make sure to NEVER let go the tip of the filament as it may create nodes. Holes on the side of the spool can be used to prevent this issue. ⚙️ 【Printing Settings】 - Nozzle: 250°C – 270°C; Bed: 25°C – 50°C; Speed: 30mm/s – 60mm/s; Annealing: 80°C for 6h (To ensure a good heat resistance of your printed part it is recommended to anneal your PolyMide CoPA 3D print model); Bed Surface: Glass with glue (PVA glue is always required for better adhesion). ⚠️ 【Note】 - We recommend to switch to a abrasion resistant nozzle such as hardened steel nozzle. PolyMide CoPA 3D Filament is a very stiff filament so it is required to have a good set up to ensure a good feeding (avoiding excessive bending in the filament guide system). It's ultra critical to have your filament enclosed in a dessicant box while printing, put you filament back to the resealable bag when not using it, and keep your nozzles clean between every 8 prints or so. 🛡️ 【RISK FREE & LIFETIME TECHNICAL SUPPORT】 - We offer a full refund if the product is not performing as expected. Let us help you get your perfect beatiful prints and contact us via Amazon anytime you need.
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Reviews

Global ratings 3
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    2
  • 4
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  • 3
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  • 2
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Type of review

Revainrating 5 out of 5

Strong, beautiful, easy to print on.

This is awesome. I could stop here, but I'll tell you why. The parts come off the assembly platform ready to use, with minimal post-processing here and there (probably due to my own ribbon settings and preference for very hot and slow printing). The parts are lightweight yet very strong with excellent heat resistance and amazing tactile qualities. Layer lines are almost non-existent and I should add that I usually print with a 0.6 nozzle diameter with 0.2 to 0.36 layers depending on the part…

Pros
  • Easy printing
Cons
  • I'll write later

Revainrating 2 out of 5

Edited: Very fragile for some reason

Edited: It was undoubtedly easy to print BUT the prints had incredibly poor interlayer adhesion. I was printing a large structural part with a layer thickness of 0.6mm and a layer height of 0.3mm at 270°C in a heated enclosure and when I removed the print the parts broke in my hands. This filament was dried and printed from a dry box so I have no idea why it is so weak. The only thing that would be better would be if they made CoPA out of carbon fiber. I was concerned about warping because I've

Pros
  • NO RISK AND LIFETIME TECHNICAL SUPPORT
Cons
  • Very expensive

Revainrating 5 out of 5

This is serious filament

I've read some of the reviews here and was a bit overwhelmed, but they don't match the incredibly detailed and enthusiastic reviews on YouTube. I tried. The parts I used this on are intake bushings on an RV8. It's a two-seat, 220-mile plane with 3D-printed sleeves right up front. I wasn't at all sure if the 3D printed material would hold up. The first material I tried was NylonX. After a month of struggling with 4 spools, countless calls and emails to tech support, they finally decided their…

Pros
  • Strong & Tough
Cons
  • Socket required