An experienced design engineer once said to me "If you are adding simplicity or removing complexity your design is going in the right direction, if you are adding parts and complexity it's a sign that you should review your design" This sums that idea up for me!
@@jayblack8132 yes you need a solution for keeping the filament dry. Most common are sealed boxes and desiccant or vacuum bags. However for some filament, especially filament that isn't very hygroscopic, it will take a while to rehydrate, so you can get away with leaving it in the open and only dehydrating when you notice it has become too wet.
@@jayblack8132I am considering the same. Hot air can contain more moisture than cold air and water is more likely to evaporate from something when it is hot, that is how the principle works. In the case of this box (see what I did there?), convection makes the "extra wet air" rise out the top. It is then replaced with colder air, which can contain more air as it heats up. If you cycle the "wet" air out once the drying is complete (and ideally vacuum pack it), the moisture should stay out. I'm too lazy for all that, so I use almost-airtight crates with no vacuum bags and recycle the dessicant pack when I notice the humidity goes up (if it doesn't recover after taking out or putting in a roll). A mini-fridge would be the ideal size for having a mini dehydrator.
I did this! I had two failed prints and didn't know why...on one printer the filament (PLA) broke and got stuck in the tube. Not knowing my filament needed to be dried, I moved it over to my second printer and restarted my print. The filament was being shredded going into the extruder (swollen) and broke again. I asked in a social media group what was going on..someone told me to dry my filament. I don't have a dryer so I Googled how to do it without one...and found your video. I gave it a try...and the next day the filament printed flawlessly! Thank you so much!!!!
I'm surprised you managed to salvage your filament. According to Zack Freedman, the process where humidity makes filament brittle is permanent, so filament that has become brittle can't be restored.
Coming back to say that this technique truly is a miracle! Not a single filament, the old ones and the cheap ones, resist to it. I get better result from filaments I had almost 7 months ago after this than brand new ones. Thanks again!
Thanks for taking the time to come back and comment👍 I don't really use this method myself as I have a modified filament dryer but I dry all the filament I buy now. So much of it comes with some kind of moisture content. A lot of PETG is unusable from new for me. Like you, I'm always able to print with older filament after a spell of drying too. Glad you have good results after watching one of my videos, that's what they are here for🙂
Glad to hear about your results. How long do you keep your filaments in there? I understand that this will depend on how moist the filament has gotten but can you give a ballpark figure of what 'should generally' be enough?
@@lebasson I do about 60deg for at least 4 hours. for my oldest filaments, I did left some overnight so that would be a good 8h. But I do believe that if your filament is in a very bad storage, the humidity can actually break the filament to the point that drying it won't help.
@@Thiccologist - I've been drying PETG at 55° for 12-18 hours. I can't use a higher temperature because the PETG is on a spool made from PLA, but that temperature and duration works fine.
Thank you for these amazing tips! I was frustrated with the cheap filament I bought during a clearance sale-it was brittle and kept breaking. After trying this trick, the filament is much better now and prints without breaking. Plus, I don’t have to buy those ridiculously expensive filament dryers. Thank you!
As someone who is just now getting into 3d printing, thank you sooo much for this. I surely would have went out and purchased a filament dryer sooner or later and this just saves me money and space.
I didn't even seek for the way to dry filament, but here i am. Considering that i still have a problem with stringing, i will definetely try this method. It's free after all. Thx in advance for this tip
Instead of working outside the box, you used the box. Simply ingenious and effective. You've earned yourself a thumbs-up, a new subscriber, and a $5 tip. Keep up the great work!
I "built" this yesterday and I was quite amazed how good this works. I had a wet roll of PETG which came very wet from the factory. I couldn't even finish my calibration prints, it was popping all the time and the models just crumbled. Let it sit on the bed at 65C ovenight and it now prints great. I already have 28 of your dryboxes made, so thank you for those also. I use the 5l variant of the storage box because I don't use the somewhat big dehumidifiers but rather silica in Nylon "Organza" Bags. Thanks a lot, you made my life easier!
Now that is "thinking within the box".... Excellent, I'm going to give this a whirl - maybe turbo it with an extractor fan, maybe print a cover that fits snug over the spool - you've definitely got my creative juices flowing!
Thanks mate! I just dried my PETG spool for about 4 hours and it worked like a charm! I just had to set the bed to 95C to keep the temperature inside the box around 65C
LMAO DUDEEEEE!!!! comenting on an old video, but i just got my first printer and for some reason the dryer wont arrive for 2 more weeks, ive been printing like a kid with a new toy for 2 days until today i started seeing adhesion problems and bubbles in my prints, from reading online i found is most likely a moisture problem, but dont want to put the filament in my oven (i cook there and im not sure how safe it is) then i thought of the bed printer, i rigged a box from leftover cardboard for Christmas present packing and it worked, never thought of using the box the filament came in lol, this is genius
@@libervolucion im using a glass bed 90C for my tpu/petg around 3hrs. I flip it over once and awhile and check on it so it doesnt catch on fire(its a cardboard roll)
Fantastic video. I nearly bought a Sunlu Plus filament dryer as they were only £19 on a well known Chinese site. The cheaper price for it concerned me. I found a cardboard box that the spool fitted in and fortunately it fitted on the heated plate nicely. I did put a few holes in the top. I then realised that by turning the box over would let the hot humid air out and replace it with the room air, (I did this every hour for 6 hours). This is where the air comes from when the hot damp air rises and leaves the box through the holes anyway. The spool stopped the filament touching the plate and dried it out nicely. My prints had got to the stage I was almost going to give up on the Ender 3 S1. Now I love it again. I realised that paper and cardboard won't burn until much higher temps so I used it to keep the heat below the bed trapped in. I'll install insulation under the plate in future. Then I realised that in the software I can turn off the injector head temp to under room temp and the fan to off. So the only power was for the heated bed. I can't find a way to upload the images of the 2 prints, but they are night and day. I had read on the web that PLA doesn't take on much moisture and you don't need to worry about it. PLA needs to be dried out. I nearly bunged my printer, when it was 2 year old filament that had gone damp. I had noticed that it snapped most times I came back to the printer, now hopefully it won't. Now I think I'll get some vacuum bags to store the dried filament in with some silica gel. I don't think PLA will be affected by moisture during a print of 4 or 5 hours, I think it would take days. I'll learn over time.
Great simple idea. Also, if you use a cardboard box that is uncoated, the cardboard will absorb moisture from the inside and wick it to the outside to evaporate which will make it even more efficient.
Tried it on PETG and worked nicely! I didnt even make holes in the box, just turned it upside down, rotated it so edges were of the bed so some air can get it and set bed temp to 60 celsius. Ran it for about 1,5 hours. Thank you very much for the video.
This worked! Thanks for posting this video. I had some TPU that seemed to be popping and under extruding but after setting it up like you suggested went to bed got up and the filament worked fine.
That’s really quite clever and easily made! I use a Kmart food dehydrator with a cardboard cylinder to replace the plastic shelving. $55 and it works perfectly. It will do multiple rolls of filament and really improves printing results. The dried filament is stored in vacuum bags or sealed plastic storage from Bunnings, some even have a PVC pipe rack and filament path of Bowden tube to allow direct feeding. Can store 4 rolls and alternate as required. 👍🏻
brilliant use of the bed! I came about this in a slightly different fashion that holds a bit more and I can still print while using. I bought a 2 pack of Plant Heating mats on AMZ (in testing stay between 70-85 degrees and each mat holds 2 spools) For < $30 and with 4 cardboard boxes I got a 4 spool dehumidifier that doesn't tie up my printer bed. ;)
I just got a 3D printer a few days ago and I am so using this! This is genius! I saw this video first when I didn’t have a printer yet and I just haven’t stopped thinking about it!
I am back with news. This worked for an old pla spool I have had for quite a while. It was brittle to the touch but now it's not breaking as easily, going to try a print and see how it goes. Really appreciate this awesome tip
That is a clever idea. I would like to add a tip if I may. I punched a little hole in the side of the box so I could insert a digital meat thermometer probe through it so I could measure the air temperature within the box. I did it near the corner of the box so the probe wouldn't hit the filament. I found that it didn't get nearly as hot inside the box as the heat bed on my Prusa i3Mk3s+ and I that I needed to turn the bed temperature setting up quite a bit beyond the desired air temp. I was concerned that I might make the bed so hot as to damage the filament spool or the filament closest to the bed so I didn't turn it up too much. I never got the air temp never as hot as is recommended for drying PETG, but even so, after a few hours of drying time the stringing I was seeing during printing was almost totally gone.
your video save me tons of money, my printer had a problem which unsolved for 2month, which i almost decided buying new hotend and filament, then i stumbled upon your vid and realised that my probably my filament is bad, i did as your video suggested and it works. 😄👍🏻
Hi AweButSome. Just curious, what was the problem you were facing? I have a roll of PLA that I've been thinking was junk. I have inconsistent layer lines and now wondering if it's moisture.
Honestly, Genius!! May not be the best for Nylon but a solution is a solution! I’m just getting into 3D Printing and it gets overwhelming with so many people saying you need to also do XYZ and rack up the costs but then I stumble upon people like you who actually have great solutions and are affordable Me and my wallet thank you
Your videos about drying filament are always great. I've already printed 4 dry boxes and they are working great keeping the moisture at 10%. This is amazing!!!
Considering the heat bed can hit 110c. I have used this method tobdry many many things. Love it. And my 2.5kg rolls... No problem compared to the small dryerw
This is the first video I’ve seen from you so I didn’t know your original voice until I clicked on the next video… I have to say I found your normal voice so funny once I heard it for the first time. You earned a new follower.
thats great input on this process. what do you think about putting some silica with the spool to aid the process? what placement would be better for it? bottom or top?
Thanks man, I just got a 3d printer from someone who didn't use it and it came with lots of filament some of the bag were ripped and exposed I was trying to figure out how to dry them out and found your video!
Love how responsive you are in the comments. I use this method now. Definitely works, though I haven't encountered any super wet filament yet. Can remove at least a couple grams an hour at 60C bed temp.
thanks. u gave amazing solution which I wouldn't have never find out myself. I wanted to tip u but I'm in china so I cannot do it..subscribed and liked bro. keep on
You could also print a foot for the box which is standing on the print bed. Which keeps afloat above the bed itself. This helps the airflow inside and also the cardboard doesn't hit the print bad which keeps it away from possible fires
and you can control the temp very accurate! mate you are a freaking genius. I can't print at all because all my filaments are damp. You can try lowering the print head and and turning on the fans in a way they suck the air from the box with some 3D printed ducts!
Amazing content dude, very helpful! I am 3D printing in Rwanda and it would four weeks to ship a filament dryer to me. Very happy that you came up with this at-home solution
This is absolutely brilliant! My moist filament has had me on a quest to level my bed, because i can't afford a dryer. Now I have a super tuned printer (From following your tramming video) and my filament will no longer sizzle and pop! Thanks so much. Liked and subscribed.
Levelling the bed won’t fix moisture in the filament, not at all. Properly tuning the printer doesn’t make the filament stop sizzling and popping. That is just complete nonsense.
I think I love you... really... been laughing out loud for a while.. this is such an elegant solution! I also have a couple of extra printers that are not seeing much of load lately, I'd might even repurpose one 100% for this.
New to 3D printing, been at it about 3 days now and I'm already addicted. With this method of drying should I keep the filament in the spool holder to prevent direct contact with the print bed?
Lovely. Sitting here with a snotty nose, munching on some cake and waiting for my print on my Bambu X1C to finish. Already looked eagerly to the "Filament drying" option in the menu but everyone on reddit screams at it to degrade your components. And along comes a great guy called Ricky Impey and shows an awesome video that it works not just talks about it. Thanks and get well soon!
I'm curious if it's worth 3d printing a little convection box, if only to reduce the fire hazard. The materials are already designed to survive on the heated bed for a long time, so you could be pretty confident they wouldn't burst into flames even after repeated use.
Thank you SO MUCH!!! I was about to buy some very expensive equipment, or stuff my PETG into the oven before I saw this. Since I have an old Ender 3 I rarely ever use anymore, this has just become my drying station!!! Thanks SO MUCH!!! I'm surprised this hasn't been taken down yet, I know there's going to be a lot of very rich people that are very pissed off if this info takes off within the 3D hobbyist community lol
for .80c i can dry my filament thank you so much , in my city the kw per hour is about .16c and in about 5 hours thats 80 cents its a no brainer, i basically can do this once a month and have a dry stash of filaments.
Hmm, very nice. I have this heating pad I had bought for baby animals that can get extremely hot, as I found out the hard way. Since I don't have any baby animals around now, I guess I can repurpose that heating pad into something like this. Maybe print out a cover, with an exhaust fan mount, as I have plenty of spare PC fans lying around, and I have a nice little filament dryer. Thanks for the idea.
@@cerolocks8662 it worked perfectly, I had used small spools of PETG overnight, so like 10 hours. But the cardboard wasn’t working so I took plastic kitchen container and covered the inside with foil, poked some holes in the top (hopefully my mom doenst find out lol). For PLA make the plate like 60 and make sure there isn’t too much space in the bottom. Maybe flip the roll I’ve half way through too. I did have one roll that cooked in the middle a lot though, it may have been slightly too hot. Good luck! If you have any more questions I do see my YT notifications in mail so I’ll be quick
Tried this with some TPU filament I had. In 12 hrs, it went from 641g to 632g. A wireless temp/humidity sensor said outside the box was 43% humidity, inside the box was 15% humidity.
@@LuksGT dunno, wont risk linking but apparently pla begins to soften at 60c and begins to melt at 180c so i guess youd want to keep pla at no higher than 55c
I had already tried it with a plastic box upside down my heated bed and toilet paper inside the plastic box, had the idea years ago. After 2 or 3 hours, the toilet paper was very damp while i was testing it with only ~75gr of filament. But i will try the cardboard box, because it naturally fits a spool of filament.
dude I almost finished my dryer and well, its more complicated than it should xd so yeah, your idea is genial in its simplicity. gonna use your measuring method to verify how good my behemoth is stay safe
Great video. I am extremely new to 3D printing and have had a lot of issues getting my bed level, etc. I think I have now finally got that under control, now to be told my filament is wet. I want to try this method as I am not putting more money into this until I see if this works. My question is, where does the sponge go? Do you place it on top of the spool of filament while drying, or on something else under the box as it is drying?
I use a food dehydrator (the type with the door on the front and wire-racks for what you are dehydrating). I usually run it at 45°C for PLA with good results. I think I need to use your drying foam technique to benchmark it's performance to satisfy my curiosity.
An experienced design engineer once said to me "If you are adding simplicity or removing complexity your design is going in the right direction, if you are adding parts and complexity it's a sign that you should review your design" This sums that idea up for me!
That is a very simplistic view of it, a lot of times you have to add complexity.
@@conorstewart2214 I've noticed you can always count on others to add complexity (must be easier or something) but rarely anyone removes any... :)
One thing is certain... your design engineer friend was without a doubt NOT German.
@@jayblack8132 yes you need a solution for keeping the filament dry. Most common are sealed boxes and desiccant or vacuum bags.
However for some filament, especially filament that isn't very hygroscopic, it will take a while to rehydrate, so you can get away with leaving it in the open and only dehydrating when you notice it has become too wet.
@@jayblack8132I am considering the same.
Hot air can contain more moisture than cold air and water is more likely to evaporate from something when it is hot, that is how the principle works.
In the case of this box (see what I did there?), convection makes the "extra wet air" rise out the top. It is then replaced with colder air, which can contain more air as it heats up.
If you cycle the "wet" air out once the drying is complete (and ideally vacuum pack it), the moisture should stay out.
I'm too lazy for all that, so I use almost-airtight crates with no vacuum bags and recycle the dessicant pack when I notice the humidity goes up (if it doesn't recover after taking out or putting in a roll).
A mini-fridge would be the ideal size for having a mini dehydrator.
I did this! I had two failed prints and didn't know why...on one printer the filament (PLA) broke and got stuck in the tube. Not knowing my filament needed to be dried, I moved it over to my second printer and restarted my print. The filament was being shredded going into the extruder (swollen) and broke again. I asked in a social media group what was going on..someone told me to dry my filament. I don't have a dryer so I Googled how to do it without one...and found your video. I gave it a try...and the next day the filament printed flawlessly! Thank you so much!!!!
Glad you've seen such great improvements!
I'm surprised you managed to salvage your filament. According to Zack Freedman, the process where humidity makes filament brittle is permanent, so filament that has become brittle can't be restored.
I just came here to say that not all heroes wear capes, but I’d chip in for a cape for you if you wanted one. Because you’ve earned it.
The thumbs up button wasn't enough. I love things that are smart and save me money. Thank you so very much.
You're welcome!
Coming back to say that this technique truly is a miracle! Not a single filament, the old ones and the cheap ones, resist to it. I get better result from filaments I had almost 7 months ago after this than brand new ones. Thanks again!
Thanks for taking the time to come back and comment👍 I don't really use this method myself as I have a modified filament dryer but I dry all the filament I buy now. So much of it comes with some kind of moisture content. A lot of PETG is unusable from new for me. Like you, I'm always able to print with older filament after a spell of drying too. Glad you have good results after watching one of my videos, that's what they are here for🙂
Glad to hear about your results. How long do you keep your filaments in there? I understand that this will depend on how moist the filament has gotten but can you give a ballpark figure of what 'should generally' be enough?
@@lebasson I do about 60deg for at least 4 hours. for my oldest filaments, I did left some overnight so that would be a good 8h. But I do believe that if your filament is in a very bad storage, the humidity can actually break the filament to the point that drying it won't help.
@@RickyImpey What temperature do you normally use for drying your PETG and for how long?
@@Thiccologist - I've been drying PETG at 55° for 12-18 hours. I can't use a higher temperature because the PETG is on a spool made from PLA, but that temperature and duration works fine.
Thank you for these amazing tips! I was frustrated with the cheap filament I bought during a clearance sale-it was brittle and kept breaking. After trying this trick, the filament is much better now and prints without breaking. Plus, I don’t have to buy those ridiculously expensive filament dryers. Thank you!
As someone who is just now getting into 3d printing, thank you sooo much for this. I surely would have went out and purchased a filament dryer sooner or later and this just saves me money and space.
I didn't even seek for the way to dry filament, but here i am. Considering that i still have a problem with stringing, i will definetely try this method. It's free after all. Thx in advance for this tip
Instead of working outside the box, you used the box.
Simply ingenious and effective. You've earned yourself a thumbs-up, a new subscriber, and a $5 tip. Keep up the great work!
Thanks very much, I really appreciate the comment and tip!
damn, ya missed the chance to really box in a good pun there
hehe... im not sorry
I "built" this yesterday and I was quite amazed how good this works. I had a wet roll of PETG which came very wet from the factory. I couldn't even finish my calibration prints, it was popping all the time and the models just crumbled. Let it sit on the bed at 65C ovenight and it now prints great.
I already have 28 of your dryboxes made, so thank you for those also. I use the 5l variant of the storage box because I don't use the somewhat big dehumidifiers but rather silica in Nylon "Organza" Bags.
Thanks a lot, you made my life easier!
Now that is "thinking within the box"....
Excellent, I'm going to give this a whirl - maybe turbo it with an extractor fan, maybe print a cover that fits snug over the spool - you've definitely got my creative juices flowing!
Thanks mate! I just dried my PETG spool for about 4 hours and it worked like a charm! I just had to set the bed to 95C to keep the temperature inside the box around 65C
what temperature do you recommend for PLA?
LMAO DUDEEEEE!!!! comenting on an old video, but i just got my first printer and for some reason the dryer wont arrive for 2 more weeks, ive been printing like a kid with a new toy for 2 days until today i started seeing adhesion problems and bubbles in my prints, from reading online i found is most likely a moisture problem, but dont want to put the filament in my oven (i cook there and im not sure how safe it is) then i thought of the bed printer, i rigged a box from leftover cardboard for Christmas present packing and it worked, never thought of using the box the filament came in lol, this is genius
This is crazy!! It works!! I had a unknown tpu filament in my garage for months and always had bubbles. After this small diy it works like new!
Could you please tell me for how long and at what temperature?
@@libervolucion im using a glass bed 90C for my tpu/petg around 3hrs. I flip it over once and awhile and check on it so it doesnt catch on fire(its a cardboard roll)
You just saved me 40-50 bucks, i think that deserves a subscription
Fantastic video. I nearly bought a Sunlu Plus filament dryer as they were only £19 on a well known Chinese site. The cheaper price for it concerned me.
I found a cardboard box that the spool fitted in and fortunately it fitted on the heated plate nicely. I did put a few holes in the top. I then realised that by turning the box over would let the hot humid air out and replace it with the room air, (I did this every hour for 6 hours). This is where the air comes from when the hot damp air rises and leaves the box through the holes anyway.
The spool stopped the filament touching the plate and dried it out nicely.
My prints had got to the stage I was almost going to give up on the Ender 3 S1. Now I love it again.
I realised that paper and cardboard won't burn until much higher temps so I used it to keep the heat below the bed trapped in. I'll install insulation under the plate in future.
Then I realised that in the software I can turn off the injector head temp to under room temp and the fan to off. So the only power was for the heated bed.
I can't find a way to upload the images of the 2 prints, but they are night and day.
I had read on the web that PLA doesn't take on much moisture and you don't need to worry about it.
PLA needs to be dried out. I nearly bunged my printer, when it was 2 year old filament that had gone damp. I had noticed that it snapped most times I came back to the printer, now hopefully it won't.
Now I think I'll get some vacuum bags to store the dried filament in with some silica gel. I don't think PLA will be affected by moisture during a print of 4 or 5 hours, I think it would take days. I'll learn over time.
Thank you for this very simple and ingenious idea. Absolutely perfect for someone just starting out!
Great simple idea. Also, if you use a cardboard box that is uncoated, the cardboard will absorb moisture from the inside and wick it to the outside to evaporate which will make it even more efficient.
Tried it on PETG and worked nicely! I didnt even make holes in the box, just turned it upside down, rotated it so edges were of the bed so some air can get it and set bed temp to 60 celsius. Ran it for about 1,5 hours. Thank you very much for the video.
Thank for sharing the duration, I came to ask for this
If it isn't already "thanks for watching, I'm going back to bed" should be your permanent sign off line
I second this lmao
I did this for 4 hours and the difference in the print's quality was impressive! Great tip!
This worked! Thanks for posting this video. I had some TPU that seemed to be popping and under extruding but after setting it up like you suggested went to bed got up and the filament worked fine.
Cool, thanks for leaving the comment 👍
That’s really quite clever and easily made! I use a Kmart food dehydrator with a cardboard cylinder to replace the plastic shelving. $55 and it works perfectly. It will do multiple rolls of filament and really improves printing results. The dried filament is stored in vacuum bags or sealed plastic storage from Bunnings, some even have a PVC pipe rack and filament path of Bowden tube to allow direct feeding. Can store 4 rolls and alternate as required. 👍🏻
I'd love to see pics! Need to hit up Kmart and Bunnings haha
Omg, you just earned my subscription. Straight and to the point. No need for a back story of how once you saved a puppy from a frozen river.
🤣
Same here
This,,,, is too good to be true!
I wish I watched your video before purchasing $35 food dehydrator, designing spacer 30mins, and printing spacer 6hrs
Your oven is also pretty massive dehydrator, it can dry like 12 rolls at once.
brilliant use of the bed! I came about this in a slightly different fashion that holds a bit more and I can still print while using. I bought a 2 pack of Plant Heating mats on AMZ (in testing stay between 70-85 degrees and each mat holds 2 spools) For < $30 and with 4 cardboard boxes I got a 4 spool dehumidifier that doesn't tie up my printer bed. ;)
That's brilliant!!
what temperature and how much time should I leave my filament on for, if i'm using my printer bed? ? this seems really intuitive!
So simple but so effective. Fixed all my issues with stringing
Brilliant! That is one of those great "Why didn't I think of that?" inventions. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks a lot for this video, I had issues with my pla stringing, but 8 hours at 50c fixed them!
I just got a 3D printer a few days ago and I am so using this!
This is genius! I saw this video first when I didn’t have a printer yet and I just haven’t stopped thinking about it!
I am back with news. This worked for an old pla spool I have had for quite a while. It was brittle to the touch but now it's not breaking as easily, going to try a print and see how it goes. Really appreciate this awesome tip
That is a clever idea. I would like to add a tip if I may. I punched a little hole in the side of the box so I could insert a digital meat thermometer probe through it so I could measure the air temperature within the box. I did it near the corner of the box so the probe wouldn't hit the filament. I found that it didn't get nearly as hot inside the box as the heat bed on my Prusa i3Mk3s+ and I that I needed to turn the bed temperature setting up quite a bit beyond the desired air temp. I was concerned that I might make the bed so hot as to damage the filament spool or the filament closest to the bed so I didn't turn it up too much. I never got the air temp never as hot as is recommended for drying PETG, but even so, after a few hours of drying time the stringing I was seeing during printing was almost totally gone.
your video save me tons of money, my printer had a problem which unsolved for 2month, which i almost decided buying new hotend and filament, then i stumbled upon your vid and realised that my probably my filament is bad, i did as your video suggested and it works. 😄👍🏻
Hi AweButSome. Just curious, what was the problem you were facing? I have a roll of PLA that I've been thinking was junk. I have inconsistent layer lines and now wondering if it's moisture.
Honestly, Genius!!
May not be the best for Nylon but a solution is a solution!
I’m just getting into 3D Printing and it gets overwhelming with so many people saying you need to also do XYZ and rack up the costs but then I stumble upon people like you who actually have great solutions and are affordable
Me and my wallet thank you
Your videos about drying filament are always great. I've already printed 4 dry boxes and they are working great keeping the moisture at 10%. This is amazing!!!
Thanks man, you never really know if people enjoy what you're doing so the nice comment is great.
what is this dry box you are talking about?
could u share the link or STL for the dry boxes you use to storage your dry filaments, please
@@IlanPerez ruclips.net/video/lPsYR6tOA4g/видео.htmlsi=P4HzJSaBIklXMusX
@@balhazer ruclips.net/video/lPsYR6tOA4g/видео.htmlsi=P4HzJSaBIklXMusX
Considering the heat bed can hit 110c. I have used this method tobdry many many things. Love it.
And my 2.5kg rolls... No problem compared to the small dryerw
What temp do u set the bed too?
This is the first video I’ve seen from you so I didn’t know your original voice until I clicked on the next video… I have to say I found your normal voice so funny once I heard it for the first time. You earned a new follower.
Welcome aboard!
Great idea. I was thinking of buying one but now I can easily test if damp filament is causing the problem.
My wife uses a garden germinator heating pad for bread proofing. I imagine it would also work well for dehumidifying my filament - I'll try it out.
Not gonna lie your videos probably like the best one out there on DIY trying out your filament. I always reference people to it.
I tried this to dry my reusable desiccant. It works great for that too!!!! Genius!
That's so smart. It's a very good example of first principle design. 👍🏻
I like the scientific approach. Weighing water loss from a sponge to test is a great idea.
thats great input on this process. what do you think about putting some silica with the spool to aid the process? what placement would be better for it? bottom or top?
Thanks man, I just got a 3d printer from someone who didn't use it and it came with lots of filament some of the bag were ripped and exposed I was trying to figure out how to dry them out and found your video!
I'm trying this now. From the comments people say it works.
Great video Ricky - Straight to the point and no fluff. Proper. You've got another subscriber now.
Brilliant solution. make me wonder if I can make a custom temp profile on my printer to do this.
Like all of the really great ideas - simple, cheap and effective.
Excellent invention/discovery, thanks for sharing.
Love how responsive you are in the comments. I use this method now. Definitely works, though I haven't encountered any super wet filament yet. Can remove at least a couple grams an hour at 60C bed temp.
Sounds good, a couple of grams is a lot.
thanks. u gave amazing solution which I wouldn't have never find out myself. I wanted to tip u but I'm in china so I cannot do it..subscribed and liked bro. keep on
I did this but at 85c, printing with one of the spools i saved and it already looks so much better.
This makes so much sence... can't believe the simplicity!
Legend
man this is life saver for someone whos is on the tight budget
I thought I was the only one doing this. I have been doing this for about 3 years. Since i have a couple extra enders it works great.
Do you do 7 hours at 70 degrees?
This idea is excelent. Especially for me since I do have an heating bed lying around as spare part.
How long will it take to dry 1kg of a filament??? I have my ender 3 V2 in an enclosure with a heat exhaust.
this is genius! Saved me a bunch of money
You could also print a foot for the box which is standing on the print bed. Which keeps afloat above the bed itself. This helps the airflow inside and also the cardboard doesn't hit the print bad which keeps it away from possible fires
Awesome. Love the easy aproach here.
and you can control the temp very accurate! mate you are a freaking genius. I can't print at all because all my filaments are damp. You can try lowering the print head and and turning on the fans in a way they suck the air from the box with some 3D printed ducts!
Thanks, thats so smart Ill try it out
Amazing content dude, very helpful! I am 3D printing in Rwanda and it would four weeks to ship a filament dryer to me. Very happy that you came up with this at-home solution
Great, glad it helped 👍
Thanks! You know how much time approximately take dry PLA+?
This is absolutely brilliant! My moist filament has had me on a quest to level my bed, because i can't afford a dryer. Now I have a super tuned printer (From following your tramming video) and my filament will no longer sizzle and pop! Thanks so much. Liked and subscribed.
Levelling the bed won’t fix moisture in the filament, not at all. Properly tuning the printer doesn’t make the filament stop sizzling and popping. That is just complete nonsense.
I think I love you... really... been laughing out loud for a while.. this is such an elegant solution! I also have a couple of extra printers that are not seeing much of load lately, I'd might even repurpose one 100% for this.
Ha ha, glad you like it🙂
New to 3D printing, been at it about 3 days now and I'm already addicted. With this method of drying should I keep the filament in the spool holder to prevent direct contact with the print bed?
Lovely. Sitting here with a snotty nose, munching on some cake and waiting for my print on my Bambu X1C to finish. Already looked eagerly to the "Filament drying" option in the menu but everyone on reddit screams at it to degrade your components.
And along comes a great guy called Ricky Impey and shows an awesome video that it works not just talks about it.
Thanks and get well soon!
How am I just now finding this video? This is brilliant!!
Very neat video. I got a second printer with bad parts that needs changing, ill use it as a dryer while waiting to get it fixed!
I never knew you had to dry the filament. Good to know when I eventually get one myself.
I'm curious if it's worth 3d printing a little convection box, if only to reduce the fire hazard. The materials are already designed to survive on the heated bed for a long time, so you could be pretty confident they wouldn't burst into flames even after repeated use.
Thank you SO MUCH!!! I was about to buy some very expensive equipment, or stuff my PETG into the oven before I saw this. Since I have an old Ender 3 I rarely ever use anymore, this has just become my drying station!!! Thanks SO MUCH!!! I'm surprised this hasn't been taken down yet, I know there's going to be a lot of very rich people that are very pissed off if this info takes off within the 3D hobbyist community lol
How many hours for PETG?
Consistent with the old adage "work smarter not harder" very nice!
Been doing exactly this for years, seemed obvious to me. Wrapping a pastie in tin foil and placing on the heated bed also works a treat😊
hot pasties hurt my nipples
Shame you didn't share it :/
@@jerbear7952 If I shared everything I know RUclips would run out of server space 😆
what temp do you use in the bed?
@@davidaguilar2151 60/65
what would be the ideal temperature for PETG and PLA? (fastest drying without making the filament stick together if that makes sense)
I bought a couple extra trays for my food dehydrator to modify so I could fit a roll in it, but never got around to it.
This is brilliant!
I was going to say I have a dehydrator!
Good call
Dude! I crown you King of "Why didn't I think of that"! 🤯
for .80c i can dry my filament thank you so much , in my city the kw per hour is about .16c and in about 5 hours thats 80 cents its a no brainer, i basically can do this once a month and have a dry stash of filaments.
Hmm, very nice. I have this heating pad I had bought for baby animals that can get extremely hot, as I found out the hard way. Since I don't have any baby animals around now, I guess I can repurpose that heating pad into something like this. Maybe print out a cover, with an exhaust fan mount, as I have plenty of spare PC fans lying around, and I have a nice little filament dryer. Thanks for the idea.
Hi, could you tell me at wich temperature? For how long? I dont understand in the video.
Thank you so much, my mom wouldn’t let me use the oven to dry filament and I’m too poor to afford a dryer, so this is perfect!
Exact same situation man , have you tried this method yet , and if so how’d it work for you , what filament did you test it on ? Thanks in advance
@@cerolocks8662 it worked perfectly, I had used small spools of PETG overnight, so like 10 hours. But the cardboard wasn’t working so I took plastic kitchen container and covered the inside with foil, poked some holes in the top (hopefully my mom doenst find out lol). For PLA make the plate like 60 and make sure there isn’t too much space in the bottom. Maybe flip the roll I’ve half way through too. I did have one roll that cooked in the middle a lot though, it may have been slightly too hot. Good luck! If you have any more questions I do see my YT notifications in mail so I’ll be quick
@@cerolocks8662 and actually covering the inside of cardboard box with foil would be fine m sure too, I just used plastic container
@@goatmodegaming be careful with what you use, since you don’t want to be eating from a container that you used on your filament
What temperature and time would you use for PLA?
65-70 i tired that and its worked for me
@@ahmedelwan9129 I was worried about that potentially melting the PLA but you didn’t have an issue?
This is an awesome idea, what do you think of storing filament in the cardboard boxes they come in with Dry Dry desiccation packs vs using a dry box.
Thanks from the tip! It really works. World need more innovators as you!
This is one of the coolest ( or hottest?! ) hacks ! ✌ This will be my go-to solution till I buy a filament dryer or build one of my own.
Tried this with some TPU filament I had. In 12 hrs, it went from 641g to 632g. A wireless temp/humidity sensor said outside the box was 43% humidity, inside the box was 15% humidity.
What a G this is exactly why this video didn't trend they don't want people to know this.
Ad block and Sponcerblock are amazing!
Did I miss the temperature to set the bed at? My old Ender 3 is about to get a new job.
Thanks for getting in front of that camera even though you didnt feel like it 😂 i found the information extremely useful ❤️
awesome tip! it sounds for pla you should use 40c else itd melt?
En serio es posible que se derrita con solo 70°C?
@@LuksGT dunno, wont risk linking but apparently pla begins to soften at 60c and begins to melt at 180c
so i guess youd want to keep pla at no higher than 55c
@@cate01a gracias por la información 👍
I had already tried it with a plastic box upside down my heated bed and toilet paper inside the plastic box, had the idea years ago. After 2 or 3 hours, the toilet paper was very damp while i was testing it with only ~75gr of filament. But i will try the cardboard box, because it naturally fits a spool of filament.
dude I almost finished my dryer and well, its more complicated than it should xd
so yeah, your idea is genial in its simplicity.
gonna use your measuring method to verify how good my behemoth is
stay safe
What temperature do you use on the heated bed
Great video. I am extremely new to 3D printing and have had a lot of issues getting my bed level, etc. I think I have now finally got that under control, now to be told my filament is wet. I want to try this method as I am not putting more money into this until I see if this works. My question is, where does the sponge go? Do you place it on top of the spool of filament while drying, or on something else under the box as it is drying?
The wet sponge was used instead of filament just to measure how much water this method can extract. Just put the filament under the box, nothing else.
So simple and fantastic I am mad I didn't think of it. Thank you for this information
I use a food dehydrator (the type with the door on the front and wire-racks for what you are dehydrating). I usually run it at 45°C for PLA with good results. I think I need to use your drying foam technique to benchmark it's performance to satisfy my curiosity.