Getting Started with 3D Printing
Article author:
Sergio PeciñaArticle published at:
July 09, 2025
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ABS was the first plastic to be commercially 3D printed and remains one of the most capable engineering materials available to FDM users. Eolas Prints ABS is a significant improvement on standard ABS formulations — lower shrinkage, reduced VOC emissions during printing, and improved mechanical properties — while retaining all the properties that make ABS the material of choice for heat-resistant, impact-tough functional parts.
| Heat deflection temperature (HDT) | 83°C |
| VICAT softening point | 106°C |
| Tensile strength | 38–45 MPa |
| Density | 1.05 g/cm³ |
| Shrinkage | Low (significantly less than standard ABS) |
| VOC emissions | Reduced vs standard ABS formulations |
| Acetone smoothing | Compatible |
| Food contact safe | No |
| Diameter tolerance | ±0.05 mm |
| Nozzle temperature | 230–250°C |
| Bed temperature | 90–110°C |
| Print speed (standard) | 40–60 mm/s |
| Print speed (Bambu Lab enclosed) | Up to 80–100 mm/s |
| Cooling fan | 0–20% — minimal cooling |
| Enclosure | Required for reliable results |
| Enclosure temperature | 45–60°C ambient |
| Diameter tolerance | ±0.05 mm |
ABS shrinks as it cools. Without a controlled enclosure temperature, the thermal gradient between a hot new layer and cooler layers below creates internal stresses that cause warping, lifting, and layer delamination. An enclosure at 45–60°C ambient temperature virtually eliminates these problems by keeping the entire part warm throughout the print.
Even a draught from an open window or air conditioning vent can cause ABS to warp mid-print. Always shield the printer from air movement when printing ABS without a full enclosure.
Bambu Lab printers with an enclosure (X1C, P1S, and the H2D/H2S with enclosure panel) are excellent for ABS. The sealed chamber, engineering plate, and Bambu Studio ABS profiles combine to make ABS nearly as straightforward as PLA on these machines. Key settings in Bambu Studio: use the Engineering Plate, enable the enclosure fan at low speed to circulate heat without cooling the part, and pre-heat the enclosure for 5–10 minutes before starting the print.
ABS's most distinctive post-processing capability. Exposure to acetone vapour dissolves and reflows the outer surface layer, filling layer lines and creating a near-injection-moulded appearance. The process takes 1–5 minutes depending on part size and desired smoothness.
Safe method: Place a small amount of acetone in the bottom of a sealed container (a jar or lidded bowl). Suspend the print above the acetone on a platform so it is in the vapour but not touching the liquid. Seal the container and leave for 1–5 minutes. Check regularly — over-smoothing causes loss of fine detail and surface sagging. Always work in a well-ventilated area away from ignition sources. Acetone vapour is highly flammable.
Use an enclosure, increase bed temperature to 100–110°C, add a 5–10mm brim, set cooling fan to zero, and eliminate all air movement around the printer. For very large parts, the ABS slurry bed adhesion method provides the most reliable first layer grip.
Increase nozzle temperature by 5–10°C, reduce print speed, ensure the enclosure is maintaining temperature throughout the print, and verify the filament is dry. Layer delamination in ABS is almost always caused by insufficient inter-layer temperature (cool air reaching the print) or printing too fast.
Eolas Prints ABS has reduced VOC emissions compared to standard ABS formulations. Even so, always print ABS in a well-ventilated space or with a HEPA + activated carbon filtration system on the printer. Do not print ABS in enclosed living spaces without adequate ventilation.