Putting High Flow Filament To The Test! (Creality Hyper PLA)

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
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    Over the past couple of months I have begun to see high flow PLA popping up from a few filament makers. The main aim seems to be that it prints better at higher speeds than its not high flow versions. I have been a bit skeptical so today we are going to test a roll of Creality's Hyper PLA against a more standard PLA+. We will run a series of flow tests to see how they match up.
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Комментарии • 62

  • @golf398
    @golf398 Год назад +12

    “Parts take a while to make” is one of the things I like to hear. People understand machine time more than they understand the fact that CAD takes time and effort that I don’t want to put in too often for other people’s projects.
    On the other side of it, it takes time, but a lot less time and money than getting a custom injection mold, cnc milled part, or hand making something to within .01 inches of design.

  • @nodashipl
    @nodashipl Год назад +21

    I'd love to see a high flow showdown to see which brand makes the best high flow filament and which brand makes the best bang for buck. The high speed users would appreciate it

    • @faultboy
      @faultboy 4 месяца назад

      You mean testing a HyperPLA like it is for fast print speeds? I was expecting exactly that when clicking on the video but it seems this is not the case.

    • @faultboy
      @faultboy 4 месяца назад

      You mean testing a HyperPLA like it is for fast print speeds? I was expecting exactly that when clicking on the video but it seems this is not the case.

  • @markbreidenbaugh6033
    @markbreidenbaugh6033 Год назад +9

    Something you should really take a look at is the difference in flow of different colors of filament, I know from experience that polymaker polylite black flows slower than their blue and orange. I assume it is due to the pigment used, but that is definitely a factor and something I have never seen anyone talk about.

  • @un_ours_blanc
    @un_ours_blanc Год назад +16

    As for the question of "Are your parts long to make ?", I respond "it depends on quite a lot of parameter... 😅"

    • @ShaunBennett
      @ShaunBennett 7 месяцев назад

      I like " that answer is multifactorial...."

  • @brunoaugier
    @brunoaugier Год назад +4

    On a Bambulab using 0.4 CHT nozzle, I print all Esun&Sunlu PLA+ using 35mm³/s without any problem, I have tried Geeetech PLA HS, and it print nearly as well except it often break into the PTFE tube as all other of their PLA, so I stopped using any Geeetech filament. To conclude most filament PLA+ comming from Esun & Sunlu support High speed up to 35mm³/s using Bambulab+CHT nozzle.

    • @Dkbay
      @Dkbay 6 месяцев назад

      Do you mean the e3d x bambulab collab nozzle or something else?
      I'm quite curious >.>

  • @Phelps3D
    @Phelps3D Год назад +1

    Thanks for this. Always wondered if it really would make much difference. Hope we can get a full comparison at some point.

  • @brokencreationlordmegatrol3037
    @brokencreationlordmegatrol3037 Год назад +1

    “Quicker than waiting a long time for it to be delivered to be honest “

  • @qwertyzxaszc6323
    @qwertyzxaszc6323 Год назад

    I am new to filament printing and have only used Hyper PLA so far as that is what Creality sent with the printer and I have not had any issues printing whatsoever. Compared to resin printing i love filament printing. I have not had any failed prints and the machine just keeps on printing. consumer 3D printing is getting pretty good.

  • @SweHam
    @SweHam Год назад

    Cool to see the Siboor V0.2 in a video. Been watching the streams recently and I'm eagerly awaiting the conclusion 😊

  • @markbreidenbaugh6033
    @markbreidenbaugh6033 Год назад +2

    I have used the esun in white and it definitely flows better than standard additionally it seems that it cools better than standard also so it performs better all around at higher speeds.

  • @dereksantiago7239
    @dereksantiago7239 Год назад +2

    This was an amazing comparison. Thank you for all your work. I look forward to more reviews. I'm currently testing out the Flashforge Adventurer 3 and Creality K1. I mainly wanted to know what temperature to put the Hyper PLA for the K1 at. Based on this information, I'll be putting it at 220*C

    • @MalerischArt
      @MalerischArt 4 месяца назад

      But the maximum temperature should be 200 degrees. I think you should pay attention.

  • @daliasprints9798
    @daliasprints9798 Год назад +4

    There's high flow TPU too and it's excellent.

    • @Coolfwip
      @Coolfwip Год назад

      Who makes it??

    • @coltenmeredith8899
      @coltenmeredith8899 Год назад

      ​@@Coolfwip Polymaker

    • @XHolyPuffX
      @XHolyPuffX 8 месяцев назад

      Any recommendations on temps / cooling for it? I have a spool of the clear stuff that I haven't opened yet. It's overture hs-tpu

    • @daliasprints9798
      @daliasprints9798 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@XHolyPuffX I did the 10 min TPU benchy at 270 but I hear TPU really shouldn't be allowed to cook at that temp. 240 is probably fine for reasonable speeds or if you have a long enough melt zone (I didn't).

    • @XHolyPuffX
      @XHolyPuffX 7 месяцев назад

      @@daliasprints9798 What happens if you run it that high? And what do you mean by melt zone?

  • @rahimdamji9602
    @rahimdamji9602 Год назад

    Appreciate that siboor v0.2 love! Great video!

  • @NightWasher518
    @NightWasher518 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have used the Flashforge high speed PLA and it has never had a problem with my Elegoo Neptune Plus at 250mm3/s and I have tried regular PLA and it doesn’t like those speeds.

  • @MarAwanaDISPOCO.
    @MarAwanaDISPOCO. 6 месяцев назад

    You can download specific speeds and settings from alder Sorcerers that have it set

  • @djispro4272
    @djispro4272 Год назад +2

    Interesting... I wonder what 247printing's "Secret PLA" is - is it just eSun ABS+?

  • @MalerischArt
    @MalerischArt 4 месяца назад

    With my Creality CR 10 v2 printer, I get very good prints at 70 speed and it gives wonderful fine details. I also don't see any fringing or other errors. but I tried printing at 180 speed with cr10 v2 and the result was terrible. Sometimes it's all about your printer. It's a good filament for a good printer, but it's an unnecessary option for someone with a simple printer like mine.

  • @DiomedesDominguez
    @DiomedesDominguez Год назад

    You should be able to measure white prints using a dark room with a IR camera, so you will have a gray scaled image

  • @PrintingPerspective
    @PrintingPerspective Год назад +2

    After I tested one spool of "high-speed" PLA my thoughts were that it is just snake oil as it had the same performance as regular PLA. At least this one has a single-digit % improvement so no one can call it a scam lol. :)

  • @RCairplanefy
    @RCairplanefy Год назад +1

    try abs vs Creality Hyper PLA it will be the same because Hyper PLA is a mixer of abs +pla

  • @leesmithsworkshop
    @leesmithsworkshop Год назад

    I tested the Esun and it would out perform most of my filaments especially prusament . I was surprised with eryone, pla that would print very fast too. Personally I think you should have tested higher than 24, then you would start to see a difference.

  • @graphguy
    @graphguy Год назад

    Just ordered some creality hyper.. we will see.

  • @petercallison5765
    @petercallison5765 Месяц назад

    You need way higher temps to reach max flow - 260 degrees at max speeds

  •  Год назад +1

    HiFlow rate in this test would mean that the speed needs to increase. And you can clearly see that even at higher layers the speed is not fast aka the flow in not high. The speed of the printer at 32g/s with a 0,4 mm nozzle should be over 150mm/s

    • @ModBotArmy
      @ModBotArmy  Год назад

      The speed does increase on the v0.2. High flow isn’t just speed but also layer height/width. The orcaslicer does a great job of this. It did not increase on the Ankermake printer though.

    •  Год назад +1

      @@ModBotArmy It seemed like the Anker wasnt printing faster than maybe 70mm/s .
      Does it print normaly over that speed and what is the highest flowrate you have tried in the Anker. It seems odd that any printer would be software limited to print at a flowrate under 15.

    •  Год назад

      Also would be interesting trying the flowrate vase mode print with different layer heights (0.1mm to 0.3mm) with the 0.4 mm nozzle

  • @adamcboyd
    @adamcboyd 2 месяца назад

    It's designed to be run at 600mm/s. How about testing that? It would be helpful since that would be an obvious test to do.

  • @11wallace11
    @11wallace11 Год назад

    Is that the xmas edition of Polymaker's green pla?

  • @nunovicente34
    @nunovicente34 Год назад +2

    Since that Hyper Pla has a bigger temperature range, if you push the Hotend temps more it will probably flow way better than Regular Pla

  • @Coolfwip
    @Coolfwip Год назад

    "How much does it cost?"
    "Pennies for me, 20 for you"
    *after the how long does it take conversation*

  • @kbee225
    @kbee225 10 месяцев назад

    That's odd. You'd expect a higher MFI for a high speed filament. 🤔

  • @amiga2091
    @amiga2091 Год назад

    Why is that bed so small?

  • @thePavuk
    @thePavuk Год назад

    High flow PLA + 0.2 or 0.25mm nozzle. Did anybody tested it?

  • @Paul-hg9zs
    @Paul-hg9zs 8 месяцев назад

    Hi, will the hyper speed filament work on a Ender 2 pro?

  • @bleach_drink_me
    @bleach_drink_me Год назад

    Thanks for testing. I have been playing around with high speed pla myself. I'm not flow limited at the speed my motion system can handle wish a .4mm nozzle so I haven't really noticed a difference in flow rates. I have noticed a difference with cooling. The high speed filament seems to tolerate my lack of cooling at high speeds.
    I actually got a pretty good quality benchy in ~13mins with high speed pla including acceptable overhangs and smoke stack. While printing the same gcode with standard pla I got droopy overhangs and a clearly overheated smoke stack.

  • @kimmotoivanen
    @kimmotoivanen Год назад +1

    Would the difference between the filaments be higher at lower temperature, thinking about 200 degrees C?

  • @LWJCarroll
    @LWJCarroll Год назад

    Surely std pla will “hyperflow” at a higher than normal print temp anyway? I was asking someone who makes filament and he said it will flow or be more runny simply at a higher temperature. So is this just a marketing gimmick to boost the retail price? Glass gets runnier at higher temps than usually used fyi…Laurie NZ.

  • @mitchimal
    @mitchimal Год назад

    Why didn't you just use the X1C would have shown a more drastic result faster

    • @ModBotArmy
      @ModBotArmy  Год назад

      Speed wouldnt have been too different. This test does increase speed but alot of it is in line size.

  • @lsellclumanetsolarenergyll5071

    First what nozzle and hotend you used ? You also know PLA HF to be printed 15C higher right?

  • @thezx5795
    @thezx5795 4 месяца назад

    I guess he's never heard of a black backdrop

  • @daliasprints9798
    @daliasprints9798 Год назад +9

    The AnkerMake was obviously printing ultra slow, not at the requested speed. 🤦 Garbage printer, as expected from them.

    • @lasskinn474
      @lasskinn474 Год назад +1

      well it's not really garbage if it has correctly configured machine limits. for most users anyway.
      does that flow test increase flow or increase speed to match the wanted flow? I thought it would just increase the amount of extrusion per mm, not affecting the speed the printhead moves (that would screw over the test on many printers if it wanted to move it faster )

    • @daliasprints9798
      @daliasprints9798 Год назад +2

      @@lasskinn474 The test increases, and has to increase, speed. Just extruding more material per unit distance would make the walls quickly widen and topple over, melting from too much heat density and even squishing out past the nozzle flat.
      Anyway, the speeds it was moving were so pitifully slow it couldn't have been exceeding 5 mm³/s, probably not even 3...

    • @REDxFROG
      @REDxFROG 8 месяцев назад

      Agree but also disagree. The printer is aware of bad input and compensates for that to achieve a good print result, which it always did.

  • @BelviGER
    @BelviGER Год назад +1

    Software that Anker creates does stuff that is not documented and can not be affected by the user? I am shocked.
    Next you tell me that the camera uploads all its footage to a random chinese server

  • @jameson6682
    @jameson6682 Год назад

    first?

  • @AnotherCG
    @AnotherCG 9 месяцев назад

    I literally print 10x faster than shown here with the ankermake m5. regular pla