Advanced 3D Printing

Bambu Lab AMS multi-colour 3D printing system and filament Article tag: AMS
  • Article author: By Eolas Prints
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Bambu Lab AMS Explained: Multi-Colour Printing and What It Costs in Filament
The AMS — Automatic Material System — is the feature that made Bambu Lab famous for effortless multi-colour printing. It is genuinely impressive: load up to four spools, and the printer switches between them automatically mid-print. But multi-colour printing has a real cost in wasted filament that many buyers do not understand until they see their first purge tower. This guide explains how the AMS works, what it costs to run, and how to minimise the waste. How the AMS Works The AMS holds up to four filament spools and feeds them to the printer on demand. When a print calls for a colour change, the system retracts the current filament, loads the next, and resumes. There are two versions in the current range: AMS Lite: Used with the open-frame A1 and A2L. Four spools sit on an external rack and feed into the single nozzle. Up to 4 colours. AMS 2 Pro: Used with the enclosed and active-chamber machines (P2S, X2D, H2S, H2D). An enclosed unit that also actively dries filament, and can be daisy-chained for many more colours. For larger colour counts, multiple AMS units can be linked — Bambu machines support up to 16 colours (and some configurations more) by chaining units together. The Hidden Cost: Purge Waste Here is what every multi-colour buyer needs to understand. Because a single nozzle handles all the colours, every colour change requires purging the old colour out of the nozzle before the new one prints clean. That purged filament has to go somewhere — usually into a 'purge tower' printed alongside your model, or flushed as waste. On a complex multi-colour print, this purge waste can consume 15–25% of your total filament and print time. A model that uses 30g of visible filament might consume an extra 40–60g in purging across many colour changes. This is not a flaw in the AMS specifically — it is inherent to single-nozzle multi-colour printing across the whole industry — but it is a real running cost that affects the economics of multi-colour work. How to Reduce Purge Waste Minimise colour changes per layer. Designs where colours are grouped by height (one colour finishes before the next begins) purge far less than designs that alternate colours every layer. Use 'flush into object infill' and 'flush into support' options in Bambu Studio, which redirect some purged material into parts of the print that are hidden, rather than wasting it entirely. Tune flushing volumes. Bambu Studio lets you adjust how much is purged between specific colour pairs. Light-to-dark transitions need more purging than dark-to-light; tuning these saves material. Consider a dual-nozzle machine for support-heavy work. The X2D and H2D dedicate a second nozzle to support material, eliminating purge waste between part and support entirely. The AMS Also Dries Your Filament The AMS 2 Pro does more than switch colours — it actively dries filament, which is a significant benefit independent of multi-colour printing. Hygroscopic filaments like PETG, TPU, PA (Nylon), and PC absorb moisture from the air and print poorly when wet, causing stringing, bubbling, and weak layers. The AMS 2 Pro's active venting and drying keeps filament dry during storage and printing — Bambu states it dries up to 30% faster than sealed heating. For anyone printing engineering materials, this is a real reliability advantage. Which Filament Works Best in the AMS The AMS handles standard filaments — PLA, PETG, ABS, ASA, TPU — reliably. A few practical notes: PLA and PETG are the easiest and most reliable in the AMS, ideal for multi-colour work. TPU (flexible) can be challenging in the AMS Lite due to its flexibility in the feed path; firmer TPU variants (higher Shore rating) feed more reliably. Cardboard-spool filament wound cleanly and consistently feeds best — tangles and uneven winding cause AMS feed errors. This is one reason consistent spool quality matters for multi-colour printing. Eolas Prints manufactures PLA, PETG, TPU, ABS, and ASA filament in Spain wound for consistent feeding, certified to ISO and REACH standards — all compatible with the Bambu AMS. Is Multi-Colour Worth It? For decorative prints, signage, models, and gifts, multi-colour printing adds real value and the purge cost is acceptable. For functional engineering parts, multi-colour is rarely needed — and where multiple materials are required (rigid plus flexible, or dissolvable supports), a dual-nozzle machine like the X2D or H2D is more efficient than AMS purging. Match the approach to the work. Available from Eolas Prints Eolas Prints sells genuine, 100% original Bambu Lab printers, shipped from Cantabria, Spain. We stock Bambu printers, AMS units, and manufacture our own filament range — all shipping across Europe. Contact us for advice on building a multi-colour or multi-material workflow.
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Bambu Lab H2S large-format 3D printer compared with the dual-nozzle H2D Article tag: Bambu Lab
  • Article author: By Eolas Prints
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Bambu Lab H2D vs H2S: Large-Format and Dual-Nozzle Printing Explained
The H2D and H2S are Bambu Lab's flagship machines — the H-series — built for professionals, engineers, and serious makers who need large build volumes, high-temperature capability, and the stability to print demanding engineering materials. Both have a 350°C nozzle and a 65°C actively heated chamber. The decision between them comes down to one fundamental question: do you need two nozzles, or do you need the absolute largest single-nozzle build volume? This guide makes that choice clear. What the H-Series Has in Common Both machines share the capabilities that define the tier: a 350°C hotend (versus 300°C on the rest of the Bambu range), a 65°C actively heated chamber, a hardened steel nozzle for abrasive carbon- and glass-fibre filaments, servo-driven extrusion with real-time monitoring, and support for the full range of engineering materials — PA, PC, PPA-CF, PPS, and fibre-reinforced composites. Both reach 1000 mm/s. Both are large-format machines built around the same chassis. If your work involves engineering-grade filaments, either machine is capable; the difference is in architecture. Side by Side Bambu Lab H2S Bambu Lab H2D Nozzles Single Dual independent Build volume (single nozzle) 340×320×340 mm 325×320×325 mm Build volume (dual nozzle) — 300×320×325 mm Max nozzle temp 350°C 350°C Chamber Active 65°C Active 65°C Max speed 1000 mm/s 1000 mm/s Laser / cutting modules Optional (10W) Optional (10W / 40W) Best for Largest single-piece prints Dual-material, multi-process manufacturing The H2S: The Largest Build Volume Bambu Makes The H2S has a single 350°C nozzle and the biggest build volume in the entire Bambu range — 340×320×340 mm. Because it has only one nozzle, the full bed is always available; there is no shared-area compromise. This makes it the right machine when your priority is printing large parts in one piece: cosplay armour, fixtures, jigs, enclosures, RC fuselages, and multi-part assemblies that would otherwise need splitting and joining. It still handles multi-colour printing through the AMS 2 Pro. For most large-format engineering work, the H2S delivers the capability at a lower price than the H2D. The H2D: Dual Nozzles and Multi-Process Manufacturing The H2D is the flagship. Its two independent 350°C nozzles enable true dual-material printing — two different materials, or two colours, processed simultaneously without the purge waste of single-nozzle multi-colour systems. This is ideal for parts combining rigid and flexible materials, or for soluble support interfaces on complex engineering geometry. The dual-nozzle build volume is 300×320×325 mm (single-nozzle mode gives 325×320×325 mm). Beyond printing, the H2D can be equipped with optional laser engraving and cutting modules (10W or 40W) and a pen-plotting module, turning it into a complete desktop manufacturing platform — print a part, then laser-engrave or cut components on the same machine. For a workshop that wants 3D printing, laser work, and cutting in one device, the H2D is unique in the Bambu range. Which Should You Buy? Choose the H2S if: your priority is the largest possible single-piece build volume, you print engineering materials, and you do not need two nozzles. It gives you the most printable space for the money and is the better value for pure large-format printing. Choose the H2D if: you need dual-material printing (rigid + flexible, or soluble supports), or you want laser engraving, cutting, and plotting integrated into the same machine. It is the multi-process flagship for a complete manufacturing workflow. For dual-material work in a more compact, lower-cost package, also consider the X2D — it offers dual nozzles in a smaller 256×256×260 mm format with a 300°C nozzle. Available from Eolas Prints Eolas Prints sells genuine, 100% original Bambu Lab printers, shipped from Cantabria, Spain. Both the H2S and H2D are in stock and ship across Europe with EU warranty and professional support. We also offer installation and training for professional and B2B customers. Pricing is on each product page. Contact us to discuss your application.
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Bambu Lab P2S enclosed 3D printer compared with P1S and X2D Article tag: ABS
  • Article author: By Eolas Prints
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P1S vs P2S vs X2D: Choosing Your First Enclosed Bambu Lab Printer
Once you have decided you need an enclosed Bambu Lab printer — because PLA and PETG alone are not enough and you want to print ABS, ASA, or engineering materials — three machines are in play: the P1S, the P2S, and the X2D. They occupy a similar footprint and price territory but differ in two decisive ways: whether the chamber is actively heated, and whether there are one or two nozzles. Getting this choice right matters, because the gap between them is exactly the gap between hobbyist and engineering-grade printing. The Two Questions That Separate Them Passive vs active chamber. The P1S and P2S are passively enclosed — the box traps heat radiating from the heated bed, which raises the chamber temperature somewhat but does not control it. The X2D has an actively heated chamber holding a stable 65°C. Active heating is what lets you reliably print warp-prone engineering materials like PA-CF and PC; passive enclosures handle ABS and ASA well but struggle with the most demanding filaments, especially on tall parts. Single vs dual nozzle. The P1S and P2S have one nozzle. The X2D has two — a main nozzle for the part and an auxiliary nozzle dedicated to support material. This is the X2D's signature capability and changes what is practical on complex geometry. Side by Side P1S P2S X2D Chamber Passive enclosed Passive (Adaptive Airflow) Active 65°C heated Nozzles Single Single Dual (main + auxiliary) Build volume 256×256×256 mm 256×256×256 mm 256×256×260 mm Max nozzle temp 300°C 300°C 300°C Interface Button + LCD 5-inch touchscreen 5-inch touchscreen Nozzle swap Tools required Quick-swap (1-click) Quick-swap Extruder Standard Servo (DynaSense) PMSM servo Best for Value, print farms All-round enclosed Multi-material, clean supports The P1S: The Proven Workhorse The P1S earned its reputation as the backbone of print farms worldwide. It is reliable, fast (500 mm/s), and enclosed, handling PLA, PETG, ABS, and ASA. The trade-offs versus the newer machines are a basic button-and-LCD interface and a nozzle change that requires tools. If your priority is proven reliability at the lowest price, and you do not mind the older interface, it remains an excellent buy. The P2S: The Best All-Round Choice The P2S is the P1S completely reengineered. Same enclosed format and material range, but with a 5-inch touchscreen, a one-click quick-swap nozzle, a servo-driven extruder with real-time monitoring, Adaptive Airflow for better chamber stability, and AI error detection from the H-series. For most buyers who want an enclosed printer, the P2S is the right machine — it is the modern, refined version of the most popular enclosed printer Bambu has made. Note it still has a passive chamber; for true engineering materials at scale you want active heating. The X2D: The Engineering and Multi-Material Choice The X2D is a different class of machine despite the similar size. Its actively heated 65°C chamber lets it print engineering materials the P-series struggles with, and its dual-nozzle system dedicates one nozzle to the part and another to support material. This means supports in PVA, BVOH, or HIPS that dissolve away or peel off cleanly, leaving surfaces that would otherwise need manual finishing. For anyone printing complex functional parts — especially with overhangs, internal channels, or mixed rigid-and-flexible designs — the X2D solves problems the single-nozzle machines cannot. It is the successor to the discontinued X1 Carbon. Which Should You Buy? P1S — you want a reliable enclosed printer at the best price, mostly for PLA, PETG, ABS, and ASA, and the older interface does not bother you. P2S — you want the best all-round enclosed printer with a modern touchscreen, quick-swap nozzle, and smart monitoring. The right choice for the largest group of buyers. X2D — you print engineering materials, complex geometry needing clean supports, or multi-material combinations, and want an actively heated chamber. The step up to genuine engineering capability. Available from Eolas Prints Eolas Prints sells genuine, 100% original Bambu Lab printers, shipped from Cantabria, Spain. The P1S, P2S, and X2D are all in stock and ship across Europe with EU warranty. Pricing is on each product page. Contact us for advice on your specific materials and workflow.
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Bambu Lab A2L large-format open-frame 3D printer compared to the A1 Article tag: A1
  • Article author: By Eolas Prints
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Bambu Lab A1 vs A2L: Which Open-Frame Printer Should You Start With?
The A1 and A2L are Bambu Lab's two open-frame printers — bed-slinger machines without an enclosure, built for PLA, PETG, and TPU. They look similar in spirit but serve different needs. The A2L is not simply a bigger A1; it is a newer machine with a meaningfully upgraded motion and extrusion system, plus a feature the A1 does not have at all. Here is how to choose. The Core Difference: Size and Generation The A1 launched in late 2023 with a 256×256×256 mm build volume. The A2L arrived in June 2026 with a 330×320×325 mm build volume — 105% larger — and a set of internal upgrades that reflect two and a half years of engineering progress. The A2L is the large-format, second-generation A-series machine the community had been asking for. Side by Side Bambu Lab A1 Bambu Lab A2L Build volume 256×256×256 mm 330×320×325 mm Max nozzle temp 300°C 300°C Max bed temp 100°C 80°C Extruder Direct drive PMSM closed-loop servo Vibration control Input shaping Adaptive vibration compensation Max speed 500 mm/s Up to 1000 mm/s Multi-colour AMS Lite (up to 4) AMS Lite (up to 4) Cutting / pen modules No Yes (optional) Materials PLA, PETG, TPU PLA, PETG, TPU Why the A2L's Bed Temperature Is Lower One spec looks like a downgrade: the A2L's bed maxes at 80°C versus the A1's 100°C. This is deliberate. The A2L's bed is much larger, and heating that area to 100°C would draw enough power to strain a typical home electrical circuit. Bambu capped it at 80°C for energy efficiency and safety. Since both machines are designed for PLA, PETG, and TPU — none of which need a bed above 80°C — this does not limit their intended use. Neither machine is suitable for ABS or ASA regardless; that requires an enclosure. The A2L's Unique Trick: Cutting and Drawing The A2L has a mounting point for optional modules that no other Bambu printer offers. The Blade Cutting Upgrade Kit adds a cutting module and pen module, turning the A2L into a vinyl cutter and plotter. It cuts stickers, paper, vinyl, and thin leather, and draws with a pen — Cricut-style craft work on a machine that also 3D prints. For a craft room or small personalisation business, this dual capability is genuinely useful. Note the A2L does not support laser modules, due to safety considerations with its open frame. The Real-World Upgrades Beyond size, the A2L's PMSM closed-loop servo extruder monitors extrusion in real time and detects problems before they ruin a print — technology shared with the X2D. Its adaptive vibration compensation actively corrects ringing and ghosting as a print grows taller, which matters more on a large bed-slinger where tall prints wobble more. These are real quality improvements, not just marketing. Which Should You Buy? Choose the A1 if: you are new to 3D printing, you mostly print single-colour or multi-colour PLA and PETG at normal sizes, and you want the most affordable, proven entry into the Bambu ecosystem. It remains an excellent machine. Choose the A2L if: you need the larger build volume for cosplay, large decor, or one-piece prints; you want the cleaner tall-print quality from adaptive vibration compensation; or the cutting and pen modules appeal to your craft or personalisation work. Both are PLA/PETG/TPU machines. If you need to print ABS, ASA, or engineering materials, neither is the right choice — look at the P2S (enclosed) or the active-chamber machines instead. Available from Eolas Prints Eolas Prints sells genuine, 100% original Bambu Lab printers, shipped from Cantabria, Spain. Both the A1 and A2L are in stock and ship across Europe with EU warranty. Pricing is on each product page. Contact us if you would like help deciding.
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Bambu Lab 3D printer range — complete buyer's guide from A1 to H2D Article tag: 3D Printers
  • Article author: By Eolas Prints
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The Complete Bambu Lab Printer Guide: A1 to H2D — Which One Should You Buy?
Bambu Lab now offers seven distinct 3D printers, and they are genuinely different machines — not minor variations on a theme. The difference between the cheapest and the most capable is not just speed or size; it is what materials they can physically print. Choosing the wrong one means either overpaying for capability you will never use, or buying a machine that cannot run the filament your project needs. This guide maps the entire range so you can match a printer to your actual work. The Single Question That Decides Everything: Open or Enclosed? Every Bambu Lab printer falls into one of three structural categories, and this is the first and most important fork in the decision: Open-frame (A1, A2L): No enclosure. Ideal for PLA, PETG, and TPU. Cannot reliably print ABS, ASA, or engineering materials because there is no way to control the air temperature around the print. Passively enclosed (P1S, P2S): A closed box that traps heat from the bed. Handles ABS and ASA in addition to PLA and PETG. The chamber is warmed by the bed but not actively heated. Actively heated chamber (X2D, H2S, H2D): A chamber with its own heater holding a stable 65°C. This is what high-performance engineering materials — PA-CF, PC, PPA — need to print without warping or delaminating. If your materials are PLA and PETG, an open-frame machine will serve you perfectly and save you money. If you need ABS occasionally, you want an enclosure. If engineering materials are central to your work, you need an actively heated chamber. Everything else follows from this. The Full Range at a Glance Printer Type Build volume Max nozzle Chamber Best for A1 Open frame 256×256×256 mm 300°C None Beginners, PLA/PETG, multi-colour with AMS Lite A2L Open frame 330×320×325 mm 300°C None Large PLA/PETG prints, craft cutting and drawing P1S Enclosed (passive) 256×256×256 mm 300°C Passive Proven workhorse, ABS/ASA capable, print farms P2S Enclosed (passive) 256×256×256 mm 300°C Passive (Adaptive Airflow) Refined P-series, touchscreen, quick-swap nozzle X2D Active chamber 256×256×260 mm 300°C Active 65°C Dual-nozzle, clean supports, compact engineering H2S Active chamber 340×320×340 mm 350°C Active 65°C Largest volume, single nozzle, engineering parts H2D Active chamber 350×320×325 mm 350°C Active 65°C Dual independent nozzle, optional laser/cutting The Open-Frame Tier: A1 and A2L Both are bed-slinger machines with no enclosure, designed for PLA, PETG, and TPU. They share the AMS Lite multi-colour system and a 300°C nozzle. The A1 is the entry point — a 256×256×256 mm build volume, 100°C bed, and one of the quietest printers available at under 48 dB. It is the best first 3D printer for most people: reliable, fully auto-calibrating, and capable of multi-colour printing with the AMS Lite. The A2L is the new large-format sibling (launched June 2026), with a 330×320×325 mm build volume — 105% larger than the A1. It adds a PMSM closed-loop servo extruder and adaptive vibration compensation for cleaner tall prints, plus a unique feature in the Bambu range: optional cutting and pen modules that turn it into a vinyl cutter and plotter for stickers, paper, and fabric. Note its bed maxes at 80°C (lower than the A1's 100°C), a deliberate choice for the larger open-frame design — it remains a PLA/PETG/TPU machine, not for engineering materials. The Enclosed Tier: P1S and P2S Both are fully enclosed CoreXY machines in the same 256×256×256 mm format, capable of ABS and ASA in addition to PLA and PETG. The enclosure traps bed heat to stabilise the chamber, but neither has active chamber heating. The P1S is the proven workhorse — the backbone of print farms worldwide, known for reliability at an accessible price. It uses a button-and-LCD interface and prints up to 500 mm/s. The P2S is the 2025 refinement: a 5-inch colour touchscreen, a quick-swap nozzle system (change nozzles in under a minute), a new servo-driven extruder, Adaptive Airflow for better chamber stability, and AI error detection inherited from the H-series. Bambu kept both in the range — the P2S is the better machine, the P1S remains the value option. The Active-Chamber Tier: X2D, H2S, H2D These three share a 65°C actively heated chamber — the prerequisite for printing engineering materials like PA-CF and PC reliably at any size. Beyond that they diverge significantly. The X2D is the compact engineering machine (256×256×260 mm) and the only one of the three with a 300°C nozzle rather than 350°C. Its distinguishing feature is a dual-nozzle system — a main nozzle for the part and an auxiliary nozzle for support material — which produces clean, easily removed supports using PVA or BVOH. It is the successor to the discontinued X1 Carbon. The H2S has the largest build volume in the entire Bambu range at 340×320×340 mm, a single 350°C nozzle, and a servo extruder. It is the choice when you need to print large engineering parts in one piece. The H2D is the flagship: dual independent 350°C nozzles, a 350×320×325 mm build volume, and the option to add laser engraving, cutting, and pen-plotting modules — making it a complete desktop manufacturing platform rather than just a printer. Recommendations by User First 3D printer, mostly PLA: A1 (or A1 Combo for multi-colour) Large decorative or cosplay prints, plus craft cutting: A2L First enclosed printer for occasional ABS, on a budget: P1S Best all-round enclosed printer for most buyers: P2S Multi-material with clean dissolvable supports, compact: X2D Large engineering parts in one piece: H2S Flagship — dual-material engineering plus laser/cutting: H2D Available from Eolas Prints Eolas Prints sells genuine, 100% original Bambu Lab printers, shipped from Cantabria, Spain, to customers across Europe and worldwide. Every printer in this guide is in stock with EU warranty and local technical support. Current pricing is on each product page linked above. Not sure which machine fits your materials and workflow? Contact us — we advise before you buy.
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Prusa Pro HT90 in an engineering environment — industrial 3D printer comparison Article tag: 3D Printer Comparison
  • Article author: By Eolas Prints
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Prusa Pro HT90 vs Industrial 3D Printers: Is It the Right Tool for Your Business?
For any organisation considering the Prusa Pro HT90, the real question is not whether it works — it demonstrably does. The question is whether it is the right fit for your specific operational requirements, compared to the industrial machines it is positioned against. This article gives you an honest comparison. The Landscape Before the HT90 Until recently, if your engineering process required functional PEEK, Ultem, or PA-CF parts from an in-house machine, your options were limited and expensive: Stratasys Fortus 450mc / F900: Industrial FDM with heated chamber, full material range. Price: €80,000–€200,000+. Requires dedicated facility space, climate control, trained operators. Markforged X7 / X5: Continuous fibre reinforcement capability, metal and composite materials. Price: €50,000–€100,000. Different capability profile — very strong continuous-fibre parts, but not the same material range. Roboze One+ 400: PEEK and high-temp capable desktop/semi-industrial. Price: €30,000–€60,000. Closer in price to the HT90 but still substantially more expensive. Bureau printing services: Pay per part, no capital investment. High per-unit cost, lead times of days to weeks, IP exposure when sending proprietary part geometry to third parties. The Prusa Pro HT90 sits below all of these on price while offering a meaningful subset of their capabilities. Understanding exactly which subset — and which gaps remain — is the basis for making the right decision. Where the HT90 Competes Directly The HT90 delivers industrial-grade results in the following scenarios: Prototype iteration in engineering materials. If you are iterating on PEEK or Ultem geometries — testing fit, thermal performance, or mechanical behaviour — the HT90 gives you in-house capability at a fraction of bureau or industrial machine cost. Design-to-print cycles that previously took a week and cost hundreds of euros per part can be done overnight for the cost of filament. Low-to-medium volume functional end-use parts. For production runs measured in tens or hundreds rather than thousands, the HT90 is a realistic in-house production tool. Jigs, fixtures, custom brackets, tooling inserts, sensor housings — any part where PEEK or PA-CF is the right material and volumes are moderate. Research and development environments. University labs, corporate R&D departments, and materials science teams need access to engineering polymer printing capability without capital budgets for industrial machines. The HT90 fills this gap genuinely. Medical device prototyping. PEEK is biocompatible and autoclave-sterilisable. For companies developing implants, surgical tools, or medical equipment components, in-house PEEK printing capability has historically required either a large capital investment or a service bureau relationship. The HT90 changes that equation. Where Industrial Machines Still Have the Edge The HT90 is an honest machine. Understanding where it doesn't compete with industrial systems is as important as understanding where it does. Build consistency and process repeatability Industrial machines certified for aerospace, medical device production, or regulated manufacturing processes have documented, validated process capability — Cpk values, traceability systems, and quality control frameworks that meet ISO 13485, AS9100, or similar standards. The HT90, as a professional desktop machine, does not come with this level of process validation documentation out of the box. For prototype and R&D work this doesn't matter. For regulated end-use production, it may. Multi-material and support material printing The Stratasys Fortus series prints with dedicated support materials (SR-30, SR-35) that dissolve in a bath, enabling complex internal geometries that cannot be supported with standard breakaway supports. The HT90 is a single-extrusion machine — support removal in PEEK and similar materials requires manual post-processing, which can be challenging for complex geometries. Throughput for production volumes For production volumes above a few hundred parts per month in engineering materials, the economics shift. Industrial machines have larger build volumes, faster throughput, and are designed for sustained operation. If you need thousands of PEEK parts per month, multiple HT90s or a dedicated industrial machine becomes the right answer. Material availability from the manufacturer Stratasys and Markforged machines use proprietary filament — you buy their validated materials. This is a cost and flexibility limitation, but it also means the material-to-machine combination has been validated. The HT90 uses open materials, which is an advantage for material selection and cost, but puts the validation burden on the operator. The Economics: A Realistic Comparison Bureau printing (PEEK) Stratasys Fortus 450mc Prusa Pro HT90 Capital cost €0 ~€120,000 ~€7,000–9,000 Per-part cost (small bracket) €80–300+ €5–30 (filament cost) €5–30 (filament cost) Lead time 3–10 days Hours Hours IP exposure High (files sent externally) None None Material range Extensive (whatever bureau stocks) Extensive (proprietary) Extensive (open materials) Breakeven vs bureau — ~400–600 parts ~30–50 parts The breakeven calculation is the most important number in this table. If you are currently sending PEEK parts to a bureau at €150 per part and you print 30 parts per year, an HT90 at €8,000 pays for itself in year one. If you print 200 parts per year, the payback period is measured in months. Decision Framework The HT90 is the right choice if: Your primary need is prototype iteration and functional testing in PEEK, PEKK, PA-CF, or similar engineering materials You are currently using bureau printing services and the per-part cost is significant relative to the machine price Your production volumes are low to medium (tens to low hundreds of parts per month) IP protection is important — you don't want to send part geometries to a third party You are a research or educational institution that needs engineering polymer capability You need the large build volume (Ø300 × 400mm) for tall or large-format parts An industrial machine may be the right choice if: You need validated, documented process capability for regulated end-use production (ISO 13485, AS9100) Your parts require complex internal geometries that need soluble support materials Production volumes are high enough that the per-part economics of an industrial machine justify the capital cost You need manufacturer-supported, certified material-to-machine combinations for compliance purposes Our Recommendation For the majority of engineering teams, R&D labs, medical device companies, and professional users considering entering high-performance polymer printing, the HT90 represents the most sensible starting point. It delivers the capability that matters — 90°C chamber, 500°C nozzle, HEPA filtration, large build volume — at a price that does not require a capital investment committee approval. You can validate whether in-house PEEK printing works for your process, learn the material, and build operational knowledge, with the option to scale to industrial machines if and when volumes justify it. The alternative — committing €80,000–€150,000 to an industrial machine before you've validated in-house engineering polymer printing as a workflow — carries far more risk. View the Prusa Pro HT90 The Prusa Pro HT90 is available from Eolas Prints — authorised Prusa resellers based in Cantabria, Spain. EU warranty and support included. Questions about whether the HT90 is right for your specific application? Contact us directly — we're happy to discuss your use case before you commit. The Full Series Part 1: What the HT90 Is and Who It's For Part 2: High-Temperature Filament Guide — PEEK, PEKK, PA-CF Part 3: Settings, Materials, and Practical Tips
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Prusa Pro HT90 printing in progress — settings and materials guide Article tag: Engineering Materials
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Printing with the Prusa Pro HT90: Settings, Materials, and Practical Tips
You've decided the HT90 is the right machine. This guide covers what you actually need to know to get reliable results: how to set up the machine, which head to use for which materials, settings per material class, bed adhesion, and the most common issues you'll encounter when printing high-performance polymers. First: Chamber Preheating For engineering and high-performance materials, chamber preheating is not optional — it is the first step in every print. Start heating the chamber before loading filament and before starting the print job. For PEEK and similar materials, allow the chamber to reach full temperature (90°C) and stabilise for at least 15–20 minutes before printing begins. Printing before the chamber is fully stabilised is one of the most common causes of first-layer delamination and warping in high-performance materials. For standard materials (PLA, PETG), the chamber can remain open or be heated to a lower temperature. There is no requirement to use the full 90°C for materials that don't need it. Head Selection The HT90 ships with two heads. Choosing the right one before printing is important — both are optimised for different conditions. Head Best for Max nozzle temp High-Flow Head PLA, PETG, ABS, ASA, PA — standard and engineering materials up to ~300°C ~300°C High-Temperature Head PEEK, PEKK, PPS, PSU, PEI (Ultem) — all materials requiring >300°C nozzle 500°C Swapping heads takes a few minutes without tools. The load cell sensor recalibrates the first layer automatically after each swap — no manual intervention needed. Settings by Material Class Standard Materials (PLA, PETG) Nozzle temperature PLA: 200–220°C / PETG: 230–245°C Bed temperature PLA: 50–60°C / PETG: 70–85°C Chamber Not required — can print with chamber open Print speed Up to 200–300 mm/s with Input Shaper enabled (PLA) Head High-Flow The HT90 with Input Shaper is extremely fast with standard materials. Use it for high-volume prototyping in PLA or PETG and you'll see throughput that rivals dedicated high-speed machines. Engineering Materials (ABS, ASA, PA, PA-CF, PCCF) Nozzle temperature ABS/ASA: 240–260°C / PA-CF: 260–290°C Bed temperature ABS/ASA: 100–110°C / PA-CF: 80–100°C Chamber temperature 50–80°C recommended Cooling fan Minimal or off for ABS/ASA; low (10–20%) for PA-CF Print speed 40–80 mm/s Head High-Flow (ABS/ASA) or High-Temperature (PA-CF with abrasive fill) ABS and ASA benefit substantially from the heated chamber even at 50–60°C. Warping disappears almost entirely. For PA-CF, ensure the filament is fully dry before printing — PA absorbs moisture aggressively and wet PA-CF prints will be brittle regardless of settings. High-Performance Materials (PEEK, PEKK, PPS, Ultem) Nozzle temperature PEEK: 370–400°C / PEKK: 340–380°C / PPS: 310–350°C / Ultem: 360–420°C Bed temperature 120–160°C (material dependent) Chamber temperature 80–90°C — must be fully stabilised before printing starts Cooling fan Off or minimal — semi-crystalline polymers need controlled cooling, not rapid cooling Print speed 20–50 mm/s — slower than engineering materials Head High-Temperature (required) Infill 40–80% for functional parts; rectilinear or gyroid Wall count 4–6 perimeters for structural parts Bed Surfaces for High-Temperature Materials Standard PEI surfaces are not ideal for PEEK and Ultem — adhesion can be inconsistent and removal difficult. The most reliable options: Garolite (G10/FR4): The gold standard for PEEK adhesion. Parts adhere well at temperature and release cleanly when cooled. Surface must be lightly sanded between prints to refresh adhesion. PEI with PEEK adhesion promoter: A high-temperature adhesion compound applied before printing. More consistent than bare PEI for PEEK. Borosilicate glass with PVA or PEEK adhesive: Works reliably but requires more preparation time per print. Do not use standard glue stick for PEEK prints — it will not survive the bed temperatures involved. Standard PLA/PETG adhesion solutions do not apply here. Drying — The Step Most People Skip Engineering polymer moisture absorption is not a minor issue — it is the single most common cause of print failures and substandard mechanical properties. Hydrolysis at printing temperatures permanently degrades polymer chains. Parts printed with wet PEEK or PA-CF will be brittle, regardless of how good the settings are. PEEK / PEKK / Ultem / PPS: Dry at 120°C for 4–6 hours minimum. Use a dedicated oven, not a standard filament dryer — 50–70°C is insufficient. PA-CF / PA-GF: Dry at 80–90°C for 6–12 hours. Feed from a sealed dry box during printing where possible. After drying, store in sealed containers with fresh desiccant. Do not leave spools of engineering materials on the printer between sessions. Annealing Finished Parts PEEK parts can be annealed after printing to further improve crystallinity and mechanical properties. Place finished parts in an oven at 150–180°C for 1–2 hours, then cool slowly (in the oven with the door closed). This increases crystallinity from the as-printed ~20–25% to 30–35%+, improving stiffness, chemical resistance, and dimensional stability. Allow 1–2% dimensional shrinkage during annealing — compensate at design stage for precision parts. Common Issues and Fixes First layer not adhering (PEEK) Almost always caused by insufficient bed temperature, insufficient chamber preheating time, or the wrong bed surface. Check that the chamber has been at 90°C for at least 15 minutes, bed is at the correct temperature for your surface, and that you're using garolite or an appropriate adhesion promoter. Clean the bed surface with IPA before printing. Delamination between layers Cooling too fast — either the chamber temperature is too low, the cooling fan is running at too high a percentage, or the print speed is too fast (too much time between layer depositions allows layers to cool). Reduce fan to zero for PEEK. Slow down print speed. Ensure chamber is fully stabilised before starting. Warping or lifting corners Thermal gradient too high — the part is cooling unevenly. Increase chamber temperature if not already at 90°C. Use a brim (5–8mm) for large flat parts. Ensure bed temperature is correct for your surface. Brittle parts despite correct settings Wet filament. Dry at the correct temperature (120°C for PEEK) for the full recommended time and reprint. This is nearly always the cause. Nozzle clogging Usually caused by incorrect temperature (too low for the material — under-melting), retraction that's too aggressive (pulling semi-crystalline material back into the cold zone), or contamination. Perform a cold pull with the High-Temperature head at ~250°C to clear. For PEEK, a purge with a lower-temperature material (PETG or ABS) can help clear residue. Slicers and Profiles PrusaSlicer has official profiles for the HT90 and is the recommended starting point. Bambu Studio and OrcaSlicer can also be configured for the HT90 but require manual profile creation. For PEEK and other high-performance polymers, start from Prusa's official profiles and adjust gradually — these materials are less forgiving than standard filaments and chasing settings changes one at a time makes it much easier to identify what is and isn't working. Continue Reading Part 1: What the HT90 Is and Who It's For Part 2: High-Temperature Filament Guide — PEEK, PEKK, PA-CF Part 4: HT90 vs Industrial 3D Printers — Is It Right for Your Business? View the Prusa Pro HT90 →
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Prusa Pro HT90 print head — for high-temperature filaments PEEK, PEKK and PA-CF Article tag: Engineering Materials
  • Article author: By Eolas Prints
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High-Temperature Filament Guide: PEEK, PEKK, PA-CF and What They Actually Need from a Printer
Most 3D printing guides treat all filament as roughly the same — just change the temperature and print. Engineering-grade polymers don't work like that. PEEK, PEKK, PA-CF, and their relatives have specific thermal, mechanical, and processing requirements that standard FDM printers simply cannot meet. This guide explains what those materials are, what they need, and why the gap between desktop and industrial printing has traditionally been so large — and how the Prusa Pro HT90 closes it. Why Engineering Polymers Are Different Standard filaments — PLA, PETG, ABS — are amorphous thermoplastics. They soften gradually as temperature rises and harden gradually as it falls. Processing them is relatively forgiving: get the temperature roughly right, keep the bed flat, and the print usually works. High-performance engineering polymers are semi-crystalline. This distinction matters enormously for 3D printing. Semi-crystalline polymers undergo a phase transition during solidification — they form ordered crystalline structures as they cool. This crystallisation releases heat (it's exothermic), changes the volume of the material, and happens rapidly at a specific temperature rather than gradually across a range. If the cooling rate is too fast, or the ambient temperature too low, the crystallisation is disrupted: the material doesn't achieve its designed mechanical properties, internal stresses build up, and interlayer adhesion suffers. This is why you cannot simply put PEEK in a standard desktop printer and raise the temperature. The material physics requires a controlled thermal environment throughout the entire print — not just a hot nozzle. The Materials — What Each One Is For PEEK (Polyether Ether Ketone) PEEK is the benchmark high-performance engineering polymer in FDM printing. Its mechanical properties are exceptional across a wide temperature range — tensile strength around 100 MPa, heat deflection temperature above 150°C (higher after annealing), excellent chemical resistance to most solvents, acids, and hydraulic fluids. It is biocompatible and can be autoclave-sterilised, which makes it valuable for medical devices and surgical tools. It is also used extensively in aerospace and defence for structural components, and in industrial machinery for bearings, seals, and bushings that must operate at elevated temperatures. PEEK requires a nozzle temperature of 360–400°C and a chamber temperature of 80–90°C for reliable printing. Without a heated chamber, parts warp severely and delaminate. PEKK (Polyether Ketone Ketone) PEKK is closely related to PEEK but with a different molecular structure that gives it some processing advantages. It has a wider processing window — the temperature range between its melting point and degradation temperature is broader than PEEK — which makes it slightly more forgiving to print. Its mechanical properties are comparable to PEEK, and it similarly requires a high-temperature chamber. PEKK is used in aerospace (it's qualified for structural applications on commercial aircraft), medical implants, and high-performance industrial components. PA-CF and PA-GF (Carbon Fibre and Glass Fibre Filled Polyamide) Polyamide (nylon) in its base form is already an engineering material — flexible, impact-resistant, chemically resistant to fuels and many solvents. Carbon fibre-filled and glass fibre-filled variants add stiffness and dimensional stability while largely retaining the toughness of the base material. PA-CF parts are lightweight with high specific stiffness — a key property for aerospace and automotive structural components where weight matters. Both require heated chambers (not as hot as PEEK — 60–80°C typically) and are highly hygroscopic, which means they must be dried thoroughly before printing and ideally fed from a dry box during printing. PPS (Polyphenylene Sulfide) PPS has outstanding chemical resistance — it is virtually unaffected by most organic solvents, acids, and bases at room temperature, and retains much of this resistance at elevated temperatures. It also has excellent flame retardancy (inherently V-0 rated) and dimensional stability. PPS is used in automotive (under-hood components, fuel system parts), electronics (connectors, insulators), and chemical processing equipment. It requires nozzle temperatures of 300–350°C and a heated chamber. PSU / PES / Ultem (Polysulfone / Polyethersulfone / Polyetherimide) This family of materials offers excellent thermal stability and transparency in some grades, good mechanical properties, and — for Ultem specifically — one of the best strength-to-weight ratios available in FDM printing. Ultem (PEI) is FAA-certified for use in aircraft interiors and is widely used in aerospace, defence, and medical applications. It requires nozzle temperatures around 360–420°C and a heated chamber at 70–90°C. What a Printer Actually Needs to Process These Materials Requirement Why it matters HT90 capability Nozzle temperature ≥ 380°C PEEK melts at ~343°C; reliable extrusion needs headroom above melt point Up to 500°C ✓ Heated chamber ≥ 80°C Semi-crystalline polymers require controlled ambient cooling to crystallise correctly Up to 90°C ✓ All-metal hotend PTFE degrades at temperatures above ~250°C, releasing toxic gases; must be entirely metal above the melt zone All-metal hotend ✓ Abrasion-resistant nozzle Carbon fibre and glass fibre fills are highly abrasive and destroy brass nozzles rapidly Hardened nozzle ✓ Controlled cooling Too much cooling disrupts crystallisation; too little causes sagging on overhangs Active, controllable ✓ Air filtration High-temp polymers generate VOCs and ultrafine particles; HEPA filtration required for safe operation Built-in HEPA ✓ Bed temperature ≥ 120°C PEEK requires a hot first layer to adhere reliably; PEI or garolite bed surfaces recommended High-temp bed ✓ The Drying Requirement All the materials in this guide are significantly hygroscopic — they absorb water from the air. Printing with moisture-contaminated filament causes hydrolysis: water molecules break apart polymer chains at processing temperatures, permanently degrading the material's mechanical properties. Unlike PLA where moisture causes cosmetic defects (stringing, surface roughness), moisture in PEEK or PA-CF causes structural degradation that cannot be fixed by post-processing. For engineering materials, drying is not optional. Specific recommendations vary by material but as a general guide: PEEK / PEKK: 120°C for 4–6 hours before printing PA-CF / PA-GF: 80–90°C for 6–12 hours; feed from a dry box during printing PPS: 120°C for 4–6 hours Ultem / PEI: 120°C for 4–6 hours Do not use a standard filament dryer set to 50–70°C for these materials — that temperature is insufficient. A dedicated high-temperature drying oven is required. Why the Gap Between Desktop and Industrial Has Been So Large Until recently, the practical barrier to printing high-performance engineering polymers was not the cost of the filament — PEEK and Ultem filament is expensive but not prohibitively so. The barrier was the printer. A machine that reliably meets all the requirements above — 500°C nozzle, 90°C chamber, all-metal hotend, HEPA filtration, high-temp bed, abrasion-resistant nozzle — has historically cost €50,000–€200,000. The engineering, the thermal management systems, the safety infrastructure all add up. The Prusa Pro HT90 is a genuine step change in that cost curve. It does not cut corners on the requirements that matter — chamber temperature, nozzle temperature, filtration, material compatibility. It brings them to a price point that small engineering firms, university labs, and serious professionals can actually reach. Material Comparison Summary Material Nozzle temp Chamber temp HDT Key use cases PEEK 360–400°C 80–90°C >150°C Medical, aerospace, industrial bearings PEKK 340–380°C 80–90°C >150°C Aerospace structures, medical implants PA-CF 260–290°C 60–80°C ~180°C Lightweight structural, automotive, jigs PPS 300–350°C 80–90°C >200°C Chemical processing, automotive, electronics Ultem (PEI) 360–420°C 70–90°C >170°C Aerospace interiors, medical, defence PSU / PES 340–380°C 70–80°C >180°C Medical sterilisation, chemical equipment Next in the Series Part 1: What the HT90 Is and Who It's For Part 3: Printing with the HT90 — Settings, Materials, and Practical Tips Part 4: HT90 vs Industrial 3D Printers — Is It Right for Your Business? View the Prusa Pro HT90 →
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Prusa Pro HT90 — industrial delta 3D printer with 90°C heated chamber Article tag: Delta Printer
  • Article author: By Eolas Prints
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Prusa Pro HT90: What It Is, Who It's For, and Why the 90°C Chamber Changes Everything
The Prusa Pro HT90 is not a faster version of the Prusa MK4S. It is a different machine for a different purpose — built around one capability that almost no desktop 3D printer offers: a fully enclosed chamber that heats to 90°C. This article explains what that means in practice, who the machine is designed for, and how it compares to the alternatives. The Problem with Engineering Materials on Standard Desktop Printers If you've ever tried to print PEEK, PA-CF, or even ABS reliably on a standard open-frame FDM printer, you'll know the frustration. Surface delamination. Warping that lifts corners off the bed mid-print. Internal stresses that cause parts to crack under load days after printing. These aren't settings problems. They're physics problems. High-performance engineering polymers crystallise — they form ordered molecular structures as they solidify. That process requires controlled, gradual cooling. When a part is being printed in an open environment at room temperature, the layers that have already been deposited cool too fast and too unevenly. The result is thermal stress, poor interlayer adhesion, and warping. The material is fighting the printing process. The solution is an enclosed, heated build chamber. Keep the ambient temperature around the part high enough throughout the print, and the material cools gradually and uniformly. Crystallisation happens correctly. Layers bond properly. The part comes out the way it was designed. This is exactly what the Prusa Pro HT90 provides. Its fully enclosed chamber heats to 90°C — high enough to enable reliable printing with the most demanding engineering polymers on the market. What Makes the HT90 Different A number of desktop printers now offer enclosed chambers — the Bambu Lab X1C being the most prominent. But most of these have passive enclosures or active heating capped at around 50–60°C. At that temperature range, you can improve ABS and ASA results meaningfully. You cannot reliably print PEEK or Ultem. 90°C is the threshold that matters for true high-performance polymer processing. At 90°C ambient chamber temperature, combined with a nozzle capable of reaching 500°C, you have the full thermal profile that materials like PEEK and PEKK require. No desktop machine in this price bracket offers this combination out of the box. Most industrial machines that do cost €50,000–€200,000. The Prusa Pro HT90 does not. Key Specifications Build volume Ø300 × 400 mm (cylindrical) Kinematics Delta Chamber temperature Up to 90°C (active, fully enclosed) Nozzle temperature Up to 500°C Print heads included 2 — High-Flow and High-Temperature (swappable, no tools) Filtration Built-in HEPA air recirculation Extruder Direct drive with load cell sensor (auto bed levelling) Resonance compensation Input Shaper Connectivity Online and offline, remote monitoring The Delta Architecture The HT90 uses delta kinematics — three arms arranged around a central column, moving a print head in a cylindrical build volume. This is worth understanding because it explains several characteristics of the machine. Delta printers tend to be faster than Cartesian printers at equivalent quality because the effector (print head) is lighter and the movement geometry allows high accelerations with less vibration. The Input Shaper resonance compensation built into the HT90 further extends this advantage — it measures and compensates for mechanical resonances in real time, allowing fast prints without ringing artefacts. The cylindrical build volume — Ø300mm diameter, 400mm tall — is particularly well suited to tall parts, round components, and anything with rotational symmetry. The 400mm height is exceptional for a machine in this class and enables large single-piece prints that would require splitting on most desktop machines. The Two Print Heads One of the HT90's most practical features is that it ships with two specialised heads that swap without tools in a few minutes: The High-Flow Head is optimised for standard and mid-range materials — PLA, PETG, ABS, ASA, PA. It prioritises throughput and surface quality. For rapid prototyping in standard materials, this is the head to use. Combined with Input Shaper, it enables very fast print speeds without visible quality loss. The High-Temperature Head is built for PEEK, PEKK, PPS, PSU, PES, and PEI (Ultem). It reaches 500°C and is constructed from materials that can withstand sustained operation at that temperature. This is not a modified standard head — it is engineered specifically for engineering polymers. The load cell sensor in the extruder system handles first layer calibration automatically at the start of every print. No manual bed levelling is required, which is particularly important when the chamber is at 90°C and you don't want to reach inside. HEPA Filtration — Why It Matters for Engineering Materials PEEK, Ultem, and similar polymers release volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and ultrafine particles when printed at high temperatures. These are not benign. Without adequate filtration, printing engineering polymers in an enclosed space represents a genuine occupational health concern. The HT90 integrates a HEPA air recirculation system directly into the machine. It is not an optional add-on or an aftermarket upgrade — it is active whenever the chamber is enclosed and printing. This makes the HT90 substantially safer to use in professional environments — offices, labs, shared workspaces — than a machine without active filtration. Who Should Buy the HT90 The HT90 is the right machine for a specific set of buyers. It is not the right machine for everyone. It is right for you if: You need to print PEEK, PEKK, PPS, PSU, or PEI (Ultem) for functional end-use parts You are prototyping medical devices that require biocompatible, autoclave-sterilisable materials You are producing automotive or aerospace components that must survive thermal cycling or sustained high temperatures You need a large build volume — Ø300 × 400mm — for single-piece industrial-scale parts You are currently paying for bureau printing in engineering materials and want to bring that capability in-house You have a research lab that needs engineering polymer capability without an industrial machine budget It is probably not right for you if: You primarily print PLA, PETG, or standard materials — a Prusa MK4S or Core One will serve you better at lower cost You need multi-material printing — the HT90 is a single-material machine per print Your highest temperature requirement is ABS or ASA — a Bambu Lab X1C or similar is a more cost-effective solution for those materials Where to Buy The Prusa Pro HT90 is available from Eolas Prints — authorised Prusa resellers based in Cantabria, Spain, serving customers across Europe. EU-compliant warranty and support included. Continue Reading Part 2: High-Temperature Filament Guide — PEEK, PEKK, PA-CF and What They Need from a Printer Part 3: Printing with the HT90 — Settings, Materials, and Practical Tips Part 4: Prusa Pro HT90 vs Industrial 3D Printers — Is It the Right Tool for Your Business?
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