Polypropylene is an underrated filament indeed! A few things that weren't mentioned: - you print hinges with it: the plastic can bend many times without breaking - it's very useful when you want a part with low friction coefficient, so much for that it can be considered self lubricating in some use cases - it's easier than expected to print on clear packing tape. I had great results with Fiberlogy's natural PP on clear tape, 30°C bed.
Clear and concise video Jan - and to the point. It’s a lot of work to print then compile a 13 min vid like this and your voice is calming to listen to. You have got me changing my extruder bearings that I’ve been putting off as I’m keen to print something after watching your vid :) good work mate and cheers from Australia :)
Oh, thank you so much for your lovely comment. That makes me very happy and motivates me. Happy printing and greetings from the other side of the world ;) Jan
I recently found out that my employer discards tons of PP in thin strips that would be very easily chopped up into small pieces perfect for a pellet extruder, so I've been curious about PP printing ever since. This looks very promising! I'd love to give this a try!
If you’re allowed, definitely start collecting them. If not, find out which garbage company services their dumpster and contact them directly, or ask the driver (a small tip or a cold drink can be a nice incentive). I did this after my local vape shop discarded dozens of unopened flavored vapes following the flavored vape ban. They wouldn’t let me take them from the dumpster, so I found out their garbage pickup schedule and asked the drivers directly. I brought potential gifts, took a good look at the situation, and decided that ice-cold beer would do the trick-and it did! The drivers were thrilled, and so was I (though the vape shop owner wasn’t as happy). 😂
Forgot to add this, the unopened vapes or even opened are great for usb c/micro usb c port pcbs and, of course, the rechargeable battery inside. Free small rechargeable batteries are the best kind! They work great for small 3d printed rc projects and drones,etc.
If you print raw PP it is a nightmare, i tried. The material made for 3d printers is different, they add special ingredient formula. This is why good filament brands are so valuable, at least to me. I have both experience in filament and pellet printing.
Polypropylene is a great structural plastic used for rigidity when higher temperatures are not a factor. The audio entertainment industry still uses it in speaker cone manufacture. It exhibits similar light weight, structural advantages that Ultem/PEI exhibits, when not used in higher temperature environments. Adding a composite like carbon fiber will seriously increase rigidity and lower physical density, making it even lighter weight. Modulus tensile strength is just as important in manufacturing of plastics as tensile strength and in my industry it is more important. At @8:05 I remembered this calculation from university and I realize that for most of your viewers, this holds less meaning. For us Engineers, this as common as making a sandwich. Thank you for showing this in the video. Thanks for the video!
Wow that PP CF filament has some impressive properties. Some properties of both filaments are not that impressive, but the density is! Almost like comparing steel to aluminum in terms of strength per weight. Wow the temp resistance too is quite good, especially for the PP CF. If only it was more affordable and widely available! Thanks for the testing.
Fiberlogy, Filamentum and Innovatefil all have PP in their portfolio. Innovatefil also has glass and carbon fiber variants. The prices I see are more than ASA but less than nylons.
These are honestly the most gorgeous PP prints ive ever seen, and this is one of if not the best PP printing overview videos on RUclips. You should make more in which you push the system to the limit. Its one thing to print benchies and low profile small items, or even the small bed surface contact large manifold part (which was simply stunning) but its another to print something tall, nearly solid, with large surface area on the bed and long corners. I tried this material for the bed, and when stress testing it even with a 20mm brim, i couldn't get a 100*100*30(z) cube like item to print without pulling up the corners.
Now a version of PP or perhaps PP-CF that foams in the nozzle like LW-PLA would be the ultimate material for 3d printed rc aircraft. I would love to see that
Fun fact to note, just since he mentioned that CF filament was black cause of the fibers, most CF filaments are colored black. Naturally filament is translucent or clear, so adding fibers to it just makes it have little specs throughout. Ambrosia Filament actually sells red and blue CF-ASA in addition to their normal black CF-ASA. Really you can dye CF filament any color, just black is the most reasonable color since the dark fibers will naturally make any color darker.
Magigoo PP on a Garolite bed works on PP and GF-PP for me, even on open machines. PP is such a wonderful material. Almost unbelievably light weight, "slippery" finish, watertight and as tough as they come. GF-PP prints with a very "grippy" texture and really stiffens up the print also doesn't warp as much as PP.
You're absolutely right. After I did this video, I also printed some PP-GF with Magigoo PP and it worked perfectly (even sticked a bit too well to the print sheet).
@@justinreinsma9772 Magigoo PP is a must and print on garolite that is at least 3mm thick. If you use anything thinner like a spring steel sheet the PP will lift it off the bed. Print no faster than 60mm/sec. The first 3-5 layers print at 30mm/sec. 245/75 are the temps I use.
Great video! In the industrial extrusion world, PP is extremely common, and often used as a purge material for other materials because of how cheap the raw materials are. I haven’t seen someone be able to print with it as easily as you did, and I never really considered that you could just use a different print bed surface. Also, since PP is less dense than water, it one of the few materials that we have to “weigh down” when making because it wants to float in the water baths used for cooling during production. Lastly, this is one of those times where I wonder why we sell filament by WEIGHT instead of LENGTH. Since PLA is about 37% more dense than PLA, it means that you’d get about 37% more 3D prints from a 1kg spool of PP compared to PLA. It seems like selling by length (or volume) would make more sense than weight because essentially PP could be 37% “more expensive” than PLA for 1kg, and still be the same price by volume. I have a few materials I’m saving up for you over here. We should be making the 3rd and final material next week, and then I plan on shipping them out to you (as long as I get the OK from the rest of my team)
Thank you for this valuable information. I wrote down that I will compare filament prices in €/metre next time. That's fantastic! Looking forward to trying Polar Filament soon :)
Got my PP bed tonight so I'm running my first test print. After waiting for 3 months for PP sheets to never arrive from aliexpress, I spent some more and grabbed a different one from amazon. so far it's sticking really well and the purge line peeled right off.
I use PP since years, polypropylene is my favorite filament to print with. It has some quirks but once you get the hang of it, wow. Every time I think to myself, what filament I should use, PP checks all the boxes. I've said it years ago that PP is a very versatile material, but most of the time I got overheard. Glad that you did a video promising what I said years ago!!! Maybe my words and yours will now see a light. Keep it up :D
Great testing and thanks for doing these in English! Just a small note, it has been scientifically proven that you can easily clean 3d prints and that layers and pores are not the issue for bacteria as soap can reach anywhere they can.
Thank you! Also for adding this note. I didn't know about this. Can you tell me where to find more information about this research? Food safe 3d printing is a really big topic.
@@JanTecEngineering I posted a link, you will probably have to manually enable my comment to show :) if not, it was done by Matt Thomas, should be easy to find on ggl
Yeah RUclips must have removed that link and there's no way for me to enable it... Anyway, found his study on ResearchGate and downloaded the paper - thanks again!
@JanTec3D - Great video, enjoyed the content. I do have a few questions - 1 - How is the UV resistance if we wanted to use this outdoors or in a vehicle for dash mount components? 2 - Are there any especially dangerous VOCs like with ASA & ABS that would require fume extraction / ventilation?
Another great video I have had my strugle with PP Most of the time, it Was the clearence in the extruder that made problems, because of the stretchiness of PP. Great to find a New way to print this wonderfull matreal.
"Varios sizes available in the PP print shop",then "i started with the regular pp in red" that got me laughing 10 minutes ok, im a kid. Btw, I love how you test each material meticulously. Very professional! Sincerely thank you, your work is an excellent guide for those of us who have just started with 3D printing.
Great video! I remember trying PP-GF a long time ago and never could get large parts to stick well. Having that right build surface probably would have helped. Cheers!
@@JanTecEngineering I attempted PP-GF and Magigoo PP on both a PEI sticker and textured PEI back in the day and it would just warp like crazy. Materials are the wild wild west in 3D printing though, so it's possible that newer PP blends have better additives in them now to minimize warping
PP is one of my favorite materials except for bed adhesion. I tried magigoo PP and PP tape and they work ok for small parts in a heated chamber. I am really excited to try the print surface you used.
I bought some PP some years ago to make airbox trumpets, but I was never successful at preventing warping, despite using an enclosed printer. Looks like I will have to invest in some PPprint bed plate and give it another try. Well done on a well presented series of tests and good all round info. Much appreciated
This is really cool. Id recommend taking a look into PBT next. Wound up getting some PBT-GF filament and liking the texture of it so it'd be cool to see more tests done with it to gauge the functional applications of it.
How about printing supports? I believe PP sticks to itself really well, are there good settings to use or should a specific compatible support material be used?
Excellent video! One property I'm always interested in with filaments for engineering is creep. If something is going to be bolted together for years, I don't want the plastic creeping under the clamp load and coming loose.
Great video and you got a great mentor there. There is one thing I missed from this video, which is a more direct comparison with pa (6 and/or 12) and paCF. I believe PP is still something that requires some extras to be able to print well and if compared to paCF, which is quite easy to print with regular PEI sheet, I could not see a reason why choose PP(ppCF) over it. The seem to share similar properties in stiffness, toughness and temperature resistance.
I'm still deciding between PP CF and PC CF for my intake manifold, will do some testing pressure holding capabilities of each. ASA held 5 bar at 5mm thick
Brilliant video I absolutely love pp and I agree that it is massively underrated. I am baffled why more people don't use it. Unfortunately it seems because so few try pp the market for it struggles a bit and makes it not the easiest product to get hold of but hopefully one day it will catch on and become more available.
Nice video Jan! May I suggest some sort of summary near the end of the video, sharing your thoughts on all the uses and properties of the material, once you're done with all of the testing? Similarly to how you end a white paper with a conclusion. :)
Do you have any tips for helping avoid warping? I'm suffering right now trying to print 3DXTECH PP-GF on a pp plate in my P1s. I've got a 50c space heater warming up the enclosure and I'm trying to print with no fans going. It seems like it's adhering alright but the warping is killing me. I'm going with 90 to 100c for the bed temp and 235-260 for the nozzle. I've tried dropping the bed temp from 70c to 20c after the first layer as recommended for the PPCF filaments from pp print, but my printer struggles to get the temp down after the chamber is all heated up.
Looks like a great filament. It being able to print so smoothly would make for some good DnD minis. Do you know if acrylic paints would work well on it?
Definitely want to know this as well. I'm afraid this is often overlooked and a lot of people are wasting their health and the health of their colleagues/housemates by not knowing about VOC's.
Chemically... good luck. melting together layers with a blow torch or heat gun works tough. just be careful, slight under extrusion or entrained water (as in soaked, pp is absolutely non-hygroscopic) will cause the surface to bubble. Worked great with verbatim, meh with fiberology brand. Tough I doubt CF would be conducive to smoothing out layer lines.
I'm curious how the PP-CF compares to PA-CF generally. I'm guessing they're relatively comparable but maybe the PP would offer a more economical option. Thanks for the video! Learned a lot
I actually havent had adherence issues with PP and PPS on standard PEI plates with some pva glue. I have a heated chamber though which is necessary to prevent warping.
Please also take into account that this filament is a compound! That means that the added components inside the filament also have their chemical properties that are most likely not the ones the labeled PP has.
That's my only gripe with "PP" filaments. If you want true solvent and chemical resistance, unless you have pure PP, then you can't know for sure how inert it really is. Without knowing the types of additives, in high level scientific research, it's a risk to use without concern for contamination. Pure PP printing is probably not really possible unfortunately without some serious investment. Unless PPrint can validate and guarantee their additives in certain applications.
Just wanted to add when using packing tape for small items what works for me is to heat the bed to 80 apply the tape getting it really smooth and bubble free (use a cloth to rub it down and to avoid burns) then cool the bed to 35 this really bonds the tape down and helps reduce warping.
I currently use addnorth matte ht pla pro matte and this cf variant seems like a competitor. However, this seems messy to print and has cf which i hate sanding.
Excellent video. I"m new to 3d printing and this is extremely interesting. Would PP suffice as for interior automotive parts in extreme environments like ABA/ASA?
Would be a great help in understanding to include feranhit and PSI in your results, no one I know in the USA in day to day discussions ever uses Mpa or Celsius or mm for that matter, great forms just rarely used in the USA out side of engineering.
Have you heard about Extrudr Greentec? They say its like PLA but better with abslike heat resistance. You can use PLA settings and it behaves well just like PLA. I think its a type of styrene. Id like to see that tested
its a pita to print for one. the low extrusion speed of max 60mms is another reason. then there is bed adhesion. meh to pp. good for lifetime hinges. thats about it? asa-lw outperforms pp for aero or hydro sir. personal experience here, pp has been on the marked since the fdm game started. for all aero is asa-lw the best option. its a bit tricky on some platforms to calibrate flow, but once you get that right? oh man,. current planning a new tiny drone project with asa-lw for forest ranger services. and the asa is just the thing for it, its just a bit shy in the color dept. so they will get a black prototype :)
To print on polypropylene you only need a polypropylene base. And do you know one of the flattest things that are made of polypropylene?: meat cutting boards. Generally food equipment is made of LDPE, HDPE, Nylon or PP. You can go to a market and see if there is a PP meat cutting board, cut it to the size of your table and use it to print PP. I've been doing this for years and it works. There are also polypropylene signs that you can buy online from visual communication companies/that manufacture signs or advertising signs. They are smooth polypropylene sheets in different thicknesses and colors that exist. I have been working with polypropylene in 3D printing for 4 years and I can say that it works as if it were PLA. Tips: buy a piece that is not too thin, 5mm is ideal, but if it is thicker, like 10mm, it will work too but you won't have as much flexibility to twist the table and remove the piece after printing. You can warp the table (if it comes warped or has warped over the years) with heat, a flat surface and a lot of weight. I straightened it in the oven at 120º, then placed it on a marble stone with a normal printing plate and lots of books on top. Then just put it in the printer and print with the table temperature turned off. You can adjust the level of adhesion of the PP to the table according to the temperature of the first layer: if it is too hot it will fuse with the table, if it is too cold it will not adhere. I suggest starting 10ºC below the specified temperature of the material and very slowly, wait for the piece to cool and try to remove it from the table, it should have the same adhesion as PETG. Remembering that PP does not need to be cooled as it can warp. Turn off all part cooling fans. And if the HOTEND cooling fan blows, check if the air is very cold. If it is, you should consider modifying the wind flow with a deflector so it doesn't go straight to the part. If the wind is hot there is no problem, PP handles printing at high temperatures well. You don't need a closed chamber to print PP, it's not like ABS, but if you have one it's better, the finish of the piece is slightly better, apart from the fact that it doesn't contaminate the adhesion surface of each layer with dust particles contained within. in the external environment.
Foodsaftey also depends on used colors! Not every color pigment is foodsafe. For example: look at Biofusion filaments from extrudr, the basematerial is the same and foodsafe, but depending on the color, some ar FDA compliant, some not. Same to the Greentec (pro) series. They provide the infos on there boxes too which is great in mym opinion.
13:15 Hier kommen viele Fehler zusammen. Zunächst sollte das Teil liegend gedruckt werden. Ja, stehend ist verlockend einfach, hat aber eine falsche Faserrichtung und die Layerhaftung muss die Kräfte aufnehmen. Knicke sind immer eine mögliche Bruchstelle. Möglichst Radien verwenden. Am besten groß und ausladend. Von der Strömung her ist das auch besser. Ein flexibles Element einbauen, dass das Teil beweglich ist. Zur Not mit einem Stück Schlauch.
I like yout methodical way of work, at first (sound) I tought it is Stefan (from CNC kitchen)'s video. However, I found a logical error: as conclusion you said that PP printed pipe for hydrogen peroxide would resist interlayer adhesion stress regardless of your previous interlayer adhesion test which shows thad PP has lower Z-direction strength than PLA. Also, it will be interesting to see comparison of PP with the other, much cheaper and much more 3d printing friendly, food friendly material: PCTG. Please make similar tests with PCTG and put it in your charts.
I don't know, requires specialized build plate, slow extrusion, higher price, tendency to warp (which may be reduced when going for even pricier options), needs 120 bed just to remove, ... sure, may have some niche applications, but I don't think it is a good general option.
Price point is quite a downside thought. It feels like you would only use if you really needed the specific material properties. Do you have all your test results-comparing other materials in a single place? Would a really nice resource. Love the professional and scientific approach!
I am surprised how strong PLA is! For some reason I always believed it to be one of the weaker/weakest 3D printing materials - yet the tensile strength test shows otherwise. It would have been VERY interesting to see how an injection molded part of the same form would have faired under these tests.
I have been printing a lot of PP, PPCF and PPGF for a few years now and it is one of my favorites with PC CF. There is a very simple and cheap solution for bed adhesion, get a 2mm plate of PP, cut to size or order in the correct size, sand it in two directions with 80grid paper Heat it to ~35°C Print first layer with a small Z offset ant lower temp to prevent it from fusing Increase bed temp after first layer around 10°C against warping I print PP at 215°C first and 230°C later layers PP GF at 230°C first and 290°C later PP CF at 215°C first and 280°C later always sticks, never warps and gets off with a little force
I have bambulab a1 with ams, and tried to print with verbatim PP. I just waste 1kg of it, it is warping so hard. I never had problem with ABS, PETG, ASA, PA12, and CF variant of these but PP is impossible for me...
Great video, but one important thing should be told to viewers. Material being food safe doesnt mean the process is. FDM 3d printers cannot manufacture food safe products unfortunately. Its not just the brass tip, that might have led in it, (you can anyway buy an iron one or stainless steel) Its the lack of smoothness and layer lines that become a problem. Between the layers are unfortunately perfect spots for bacterial colony growth. My tech fun youtube channel did scientific tests. Coating with food safe resin might work, but it is not an permanent solution as resin makes the surface smooth but it slowly may degrade.
Ja, 1 zu 1. In der Zukunft werden die meisten neuen Videos in beiden Sprachen kommen, teils auch exklusive Videos auf Englisch oder Deutsch, je nach Zielgruppe.
The PP print stuf doesnt work at all on any of my raise3D machines. The best result is on a dedicated hard PP plate or PP packing tape. The PPprint surface/plate never gave me any usefull results. Maybe they fixed some stuff today... i bought a set 2-3 years ago and it is like i said useless. I produce a lot of stuff for chemical rich environments so PP is a must but saddly i always have to use PP tape or hard PP plate with magnets inside... I was really dissapointed. Good thing about PP is the chemical resistance + its kinda soft and bendy so its hard to break. Temperature is a problem though.
I've had similar issues with this product in the sample size printing for fuel cell and battery research. I'd love to chat with you about how you've been getting functional PP parts. Unfortunately I think the ultimate way to go about this is to move toward PP powder SLS in which none of the typical PP issues are deal breakers, although the cost barrier...
@@dmax9324 i just buught a bunch of 200x200mm PP plates and clamped them to the print bed. THe PP only sticks to PP so... THe adhesion is not a problem anymore. The bad side is that the plates deteriorate pretty quickly or you brake them when taking the prints off. PP brown packing tape is also a great option. I just put it over buildtak sometimes for smaller parts and it works wonders. I bought from PPprint the set for my printer and i got everything the guy in the video got but the thing is useless. I never had any sucessfull print off of it.
Subscribe or your filament will tangle!
O my :)
would be a lot scarier if you said your PP will tangle
Sag mir das du deutsch bist ohne zusagen das du mir deutsch bist XD
I am impressed how you managed to maintain seriousness after saying PP 100+ times
haha... PP
"I want to take a closer look at PP" *giggles like a school girl*
@@meikgeik :DDDDDD
Red deutsch du $
Because he's not American and it doesn't mean anything.
It’s great to know which conditions make the PP get soft.
My PP can't stand being in the Oven too long, don't know how he did it
He he.
haha
I see what you did there
"PP SUPPORT"
Polypropylene is an underrated filament indeed!
A few things that weren't mentioned:
- you print hinges with it: the plastic can bend many times without breaking
- it's very useful when you want a part with low friction coefficient, so much for that it can be considered self lubricating in some use cases
- it's easier than expected to print on clear packing tape. I had great results with Fiberlogy's natural PP on clear tape, 30°C bed.
Thanks for adding these interesting properties!
so the PP is self lubricating? wink wink
@@bxkxhxkg82 xaxaxaxaaxaa!
I think you dont need heat if you print with tape. At least mine sticks like a bomb with only the tape
@@redjoysftw572 what tape u use?
Clear and concise video Jan - and to the point. It’s a lot of work to print then compile a 13 min vid like this and your voice is calming to listen to. You have got me changing my extruder bearings that I’ve been putting off as I’m keen to print something after watching your vid :) good work mate and cheers from Australia :)
Oh, thank you so much for your lovely comment. That makes me very happy and motivates me.
Happy printing and greetings from the other side of the world ;)
Jan
I recently found out that my employer discards tons of PP in thin strips that would be very easily chopped up into small pieces perfect for a pellet extruder, so I've been curious about PP printing ever since. This looks very promising! I'd love to give this a try!
If you’re allowed, definitely start collecting them. If not, find out which garbage company services their dumpster and contact them directly, or ask the driver (a small tip or a cold drink can be a nice incentive). I did this after my local vape shop discarded dozens of unopened flavored vapes following the flavored vape ban. They wouldn’t let me take them from the dumpster, so I found out their garbage pickup schedule and asked the drivers directly. I brought potential gifts, took a good look at the situation, and decided that ice-cold beer would do the trick-and it did! The drivers were thrilled, and so was I (though the vape shop owner wasn’t as happy). 😂
Forgot to add this, the unopened vapes or even opened are great for usb c/micro usb c port pcbs and, of course, the rechargeable battery inside. Free small rechargeable batteries are the best kind! They work great for small 3d printed rc projects and drones,etc.
If you print raw PP it is a nightmare, i tried. The material made for 3d printers is different, they add special ingredient formula. This is why good filament brands are so valuable, at least to me. I have both experience in filament and pellet printing.
Polypropylene is a great structural plastic used for rigidity when higher temperatures are not a factor. The audio entertainment industry still uses it in speaker cone manufacture. It exhibits similar light weight, structural advantages that Ultem/PEI exhibits, when not used in higher temperature environments. Adding a composite like carbon fiber will seriously increase rigidity and lower physical density, making it even lighter weight. Modulus tensile strength is just as important in manufacturing of plastics as tensile strength and in my industry it is more important. At @8:05 I remembered this calculation from university and I realize that for most of your viewers, this holds less meaning. For us Engineers, this as common as making a sandwich. Thank you for showing this in the video. Thanks for the video!
Wow that PP CF filament has some impressive properties. Some properties of both filaments are not that impressive, but the density is! Almost like comparing steel to aluminum in terms of strength per weight. Wow the temp resistance too is quite good, especially for the PP CF. If only it was more affordable and widely available! Thanks for the testing.
Thank you! I agree with you. There are some cheaper PP and PP-CF filaments available on Aliexpress but I don't know if they're comparable/any good...
Fiberlogy, Filamentum and Innovatefil all have PP in their portfolio. Innovatefil also has glass and carbon fiber variants. The prices I see are more than ASA but less than nylons.
Great video, your audio is really good!!!
Thanks Jonathan!
A really nice and experienced person gave me a lot of good advice regarding audio ;)
These are honestly the most gorgeous PP prints ive ever seen, and this is one of if not the best PP printing overview videos on RUclips. You should make more in which you push the system to the limit. Its one thing to print benchies and low profile small items, or even the small bed surface contact large manifold part (which was simply stunning) but its another to print something tall, nearly solid, with large surface area on the bed and long corners. I tried this material for the bed, and when stress testing it even with a 20mm brim, i couldn't get a 100*100*30(z) cube like item to print without pulling up the corners.
Now a version of PP or perhaps PP-CF that foams in the nozzle like LW-PLA would be the ultimate material for 3d printed rc aircraft. I would love to see that
Fun fact to note, just since he mentioned that CF filament was black cause of the fibers, most CF filaments are colored black. Naturally filament is translucent or clear, so adding fibers to it just makes it have little specs throughout. Ambrosia Filament actually sells red and blue CF-ASA in addition to their normal black CF-ASA. Really you can dye CF filament any color, just black is the most reasonable color since the dark fibers will naturally make any color darker.
and Bambu Labs have a range of coloured CF filaments, both PLA and PETG
Magigoo PP on a Garolite bed works on PP and GF-PP for me, even on open machines. PP is such a wonderful material. Almost unbelievably light weight, "slippery" finish, watertight and as tough as they come. GF-PP prints with a very "grippy" texture and really stiffens up the print also doesn't warp as much as PP.
You're absolutely right. After I did this video, I also printed some PP-GF with Magigoo PP and it worked perfectly (even sticked a bit too well to the print sheet).
Any tips on getting PP-GF to adhere well? I'm using 3dxtech and it's warping like a mofo on my P1s.
@@justinreinsma9772 Magigoo PP is a must and print on garolite that is at least 3mm thick. If you use anything thinner like a spring steel sheet the PP will lift it off the bed. Print no faster than 60mm/sec. The first 3-5 layers print at 30mm/sec. 245/75 are the temps I use.
Great video! In the industrial extrusion world, PP is extremely common, and often used as a purge material for other materials because of how cheap the raw materials are. I haven’t seen someone be able to print with it as easily as you did, and I never really considered that you could just use a different print bed surface.
Also, since PP is less dense than water, it one of the few materials that we have to “weigh down” when making because it wants to float in the water baths used for cooling during production.
Lastly, this is one of those times where I wonder why we sell filament by WEIGHT instead of LENGTH. Since PLA is about 37% more dense than PLA, it means that you’d get about 37% more 3D prints from a 1kg spool of PP compared to PLA. It seems like selling by length (or volume) would make more sense than weight because essentially PP could be 37% “more expensive” than PLA for 1kg, and still be the same price by volume.
I have a few materials I’m saving up for you over here. We should be making the 3rd and final material next week, and then I plan on shipping them out to you (as long as I get the OK from the rest of my team)
Thank you for this valuable information.
I wrote down that I will compare filament prices in €/metre next time. That's fantastic!
Looking forward to trying Polar Filament soon :)
Fascinating tests you preform! Good to see those mythical materials can be legends.
Lots of useful information condensed in a short time. Great video!
Thank you!
Man I love Carbon Fiber in my PP. Makes it so stiff and looks amazing. Now I wanna put Glass Fiber in my PP.
PP and GF make a good combo.
Got my PP bed tonight so I'm running my first test print. After waiting for 3 months for PP sheets to never arrive from aliexpress, I spent some more and grabbed a different one from amazon. so far it's sticking really well and the purge line peeled right off.
I use PP since years, polypropylene is my favorite filament to print with. It has some quirks but once you get the hang of it, wow.
Every time I think to myself, what filament I should use, PP checks all the boxes. I've said it years ago that PP is a very versatile material, but most of the time I got overheard. Glad that you did a video promising what I said years ago!!! Maybe my words and yours will now see a light.
Keep it up :D
Thank you!
I'm happy to hear that you've been using PP for a while and that you see the advantages just like I do!
Whose PP filament do you normally get?
PP is foodsafe...PP-CF not so much. 😂 To be clear: Pure PP is foodsafe. Optimizations for 3D printing may contain substances that are not foodsafe!!!
Agreed
Exactly my thoughts
Great testing and thanks for doing these in English! Just a small note, it has been scientifically proven that you can easily clean 3d prints and that layers and pores are not the issue for bacteria as soap can reach anywhere they can.
Thank you!
Also for adding this note. I didn't know about this. Can you tell me where to find more information about this research? Food safe 3d printing is a really big topic.
@@JanTecEngineering I posted a link, you will probably have to manually enable my comment to show :) if not, it was done by Matt Thomas, should be easy to find on ggl
@@JanTecEngineering sort by newest
Yeah RUclips must have removed that link and there's no way for me to enable it...
Anyway, found his study on ResearchGate and downloaded the paper - thanks again!
@@JanTecEngineering np, enjoy :)
@JanTec3D - Great video, enjoyed the content. I do have a few questions -
1 - How is the UV resistance if we wanted to use this outdoors or in a vehicle for dash mount components?
2 - Are there any especially dangerous VOCs like with ASA & ABS that would require fume extraction / ventilation?
Scientific aspect and the graphs are very good content! I hope you will be second CNC-Kitchen like channel!
Wow, thanks a lot for your kind words!
Another great video
I have had my strugle with PP
Most of the time, it Was the clearence in the extruder that made problems, because of the stretchiness of PP.
Great to find a New way to print this wonderfull matreal.
And then the next video is from My Tech Fun, comparing NYLON-CF and PC-CF..
"Varios sizes available in the PP print shop",then "i started with the regular pp in red"
that got me laughing 10 minutes
ok, im a kid.
Btw, I love how you test each material meticulously.
Very professional!
Sincerely thank you, your work is an excellent guide for those of us who have just started with 3D printing.
Great video! I remember trying PP-GF a long time ago and never could get large parts to stick well. Having that right build surface probably would have helped. Cheers!
Thanks man!
The build surface helps a lot for sure, but I also had success with Magigoo PP an PP-GF.
@@JanTecEngineering I attempted PP-GF and Magigoo PP on both a PEI sticker and textured PEI back in the day and it would just warp like crazy. Materials are the wild wild west in 3D printing though, so it's possible that newer PP blends have better additives in them now to minimize warping
PP is one of my favorite materials except for bed adhesion. I tried magigoo PP and PP tape and they work ok for small parts in a heated chamber. I am really excited to try the print surface you used.
I bought some PP some years ago to make airbox trumpets, but I was never successful at preventing warping, despite using an enclosed printer. Looks like I will have to invest in some PPprint bed plate and give it another try. Well done on a well presented series of tests and good all round info. Much appreciated
Just put down PP packing tape on any bed surface the adhesive will stick to. No need for a custom bed.
This is really cool. Id recommend taking a look into PBT next. Wound up getting some PBT-GF filament and liking the texture of it so it'd be cool to see more tests done with it to gauge the functional applications of it.
Very interesting. Thank you for such a thoroughly detailed video
How does PPCF compare to PCCF? Comparison would be great.
Thanks for such a complete work, very interesting !
Thanks, happy to hear that.
How about printing supports? I believe PP sticks to itself really well, are there good settings to use or should a specific compatible support material be used?
Excellent video! One property I'm always interested in with filaments for engineering is creep. If something is going to be bolted together for years, I don't want the plastic creeping under the clamp load and coming loose.
Really good video with all the needed info inside! Chears for that!
Great video and you got a great mentor there. There is one thing I missed from this video, which is a more direct comparison with pa (6 and/or 12) and paCF. I believe PP is still something that requires some extras to be able to print well and if compared to paCF, which is quite easy to print with regular PEI sheet, I could not see a reason why choose PP(ppCF) over it. The seem to share similar properties in stiffness, toughness and temperature resistance.
Your pipe can also be improved by having a few more flexible bends in its path. So making it more if an "S"-shape might do the trick.
What you think is the reason for the poor layer adhesion after filling the pp with carbon fibres?
I'm still deciding between PP CF and PC CF for my intake manifold, will do some testing pressure holding capabilities of each.
ASA held 5 bar at 5mm thick
Brilliant video I absolutely love pp and I agree that it is massively underrated. I am baffled why more people don't use it. Unfortunately it seems because so few try pp the market for it struggles a bit and makes it not the easiest product to get hold of but hopefully one day it will catch on and become more available.
does it still maintain the fatigue resistance of normal polypropylene?. I always found that's one of it's main advantages/applications
Nice video Jan! May I suggest some sort of summary near the end of the video, sharing your thoughts on all the uses and properties of the material, once you're done with all of the testing? Similarly to how you end a white paper with a conclusion. :)
Thanks Mikolas!
This is a great idea, I already thought about adding this to future videos. Will do!
Great Video so far, can you maybe tell me where you got the Tensile Testing Machine from? Or how you built it?
Do you have any tips for helping avoid warping? I'm suffering right now trying to print 3DXTECH PP-GF on a pp plate in my P1s. I've got a 50c space heater warming up the enclosure and I'm trying to print with no fans going. It seems like it's adhering alright but the warping is killing me. I'm going with 90 to 100c for the bed temp and 235-260 for the nozzle. I've tried dropping the bed temp from 70c to 20c after the first layer as recommended for the PPCF filaments from pp print, but my printer struggles to get the temp down after the chamber is all heated up.
If you don't have a dual extruder how difficult is it to remove supports of the same material?
Looks like a great filament. It being able to print so smoothly would make for some good DnD minis. Do you know if acrylic paints would work well on it?
I doubt the paint would stick well. The only thing that sticks to PP is PP. I think the paint would flake off very easily.
Where is the link to the build plate you used
Was there a mention of fumes, venting and air quality? Did I miss it? Other than that, great content.
Definitely want to know this as well. I'm afraid this is often overlooked and a lot of people are wasting their health and the health of their colleagues/housemates by not knowing about VOC's.
Nice video! I actually RECENTLY got curious about PP because I noticed that my floss heads were made of PP
It is possible to either thermally or chemically smooth PP and PP-CF? As that would solve the ridges problem
Chemically... good luck. melting together layers with a blow torch or heat gun works tough. just be careful, slight under extrusion or entrained water (as in soaked, pp is absolutely non-hygroscopic) will cause the surface to bubble. Worked great with verbatim, meh with fiberology brand. Tough I doubt CF would be conducive to smoothing out layer lines.
Great video, again! 😊❤
Thanks Hendrik
I've had lots of trouble with molded PP in commercially products failing under shear/twist loads. Does this happen with prints?
So - do you need printing bed dedicated to PP only then?
I'm curious how the PP-CF compares to PA-CF generally. I'm guessing they're relatively comparable but maybe the PP would offer a more economical option. Thanks for the video! Learned a lot
I actually havent had adherence issues with PP and PPS on standard PEI plates with some pva glue. I have a heated chamber though which is necessary to prevent warping.
What about using this build plate with ordinary PP?
Please also take into account that this filament is a compound! That means that the added components inside the filament also have their chemical properties that are most likely not the ones the labeled PP has.
That's true.
That's my only gripe with "PP" filaments. If you want true solvent and chemical resistance, unless you have pure PP, then you can't know for sure how inert it really is. Without knowing the types of additives, in high level scientific research, it's a risk to use without concern for contamination. Pure PP printing is probably not really possible unfortunately without some serious investment. Unless PPrint can validate and guarantee their additives in certain applications.
Interesting material and video- enough for me to visit the PPprint website to buy some? But they are out of stock of the black already.....
can you do a test where you look at the cf filament and if it sheds little pieces of cf everywhere
Just wanted to add when using packing tape for small items what works for me is to heat the bed to 80 apply the tape getting it really smooth and bubble free (use a cloth to rub it down and to avoid burns) then cool the bed to 35 this really bonds the tape down and helps reduce warping.
Did you print the exhaust pipes without supports?
@@jorgennorberg7113 No, zero supports.
Is it possible to make a foaming PP like the foaming PLAs?
I currently use addnorth matte ht pla pro matte and this cf variant seems like a competitor. However, this seems messy to print and has cf which i hate sanding.
Would this stuff be suitable for inside a car? Obviously it can get very hot in a car.
Absolutely. The basic PP is temperature resistant up to 120°C (248°F) according to my tests, the PP-CF is even more temp resistant.
@@JanTecEngineering That's good to know. I need to print some speaker grills for my tweeters.
Excellent video. I"m new to 3d printing and this is extremely interesting. Would PP suffice as for interior automotive parts in extreme environments like ABA/ASA?
Looking at the tests done, I don't see why not. It has better heat resistance than abs or asa.
Would be a great help in understanding to include feranhit and PSI in your results, no one I know in the
USA in day to day discussions ever uses Mpa or Celsius or mm for that matter, great forms just rarely used in the USA out side of engineering.
Have you heard about Extrudr Greentec? They say its like PLA but better with abslike heat resistance. You can use PLA settings and it behaves well just like PLA. I think its a type of styrene. Id like to see that tested
What motor does that manifold fit?
its a pita to print for one. the low extrusion speed of max 60mms is another reason. then there is bed adhesion. meh to pp. good for lifetime hinges. thats about it? asa-lw outperforms pp for aero or hydro sir. personal experience here, pp has been on the marked since the fdm game started. for all aero is asa-lw the best option. its a bit tricky on some platforms to calibrate flow, but once you get that right?
oh man,. current planning a new tiny drone project with asa-lw for forest ranger services. and the asa is just the thing for it, its just a bit shy in the color dept. so they will get a black prototype :)
Hola buenos días, Usted sabe cómo sé puede imprimir en Acetal que llaman POM?, gracias
How does it handle UV?
Otherwise great video.
To print on polypropylene you only need a polypropylene base. And do you know one of the flattest things that are made of polypropylene?: meat cutting boards.
Generally food equipment is made of LDPE, HDPE, Nylon or PP. You can go to a market and see if there is a PP meat cutting board, cut it to the size of your table and use it to print PP. I've been doing this for years and it works.
There are also polypropylene signs that you can buy online from visual communication companies/that manufacture signs or advertising signs. They are smooth polypropylene sheets in different thicknesses and colors that exist.
I have been working with polypropylene in 3D printing for 4 years and I can say that it works as if it were PLA.
Tips: buy a piece that is not too thin, 5mm is ideal, but if it is thicker, like 10mm, it will work too but you won't have as much flexibility to twist the table and remove the piece after printing. You can warp the table (if it comes warped or has warped over the years) with heat, a flat surface and a lot of weight. I straightened it in the oven at 120º, then placed it on a marble stone with a normal printing plate and lots of books on top. Then just put it in the printer and print with the table temperature turned off.
You can adjust the level of adhesion of the PP to the table according to the temperature of the first layer: if it is too hot it will fuse with the table, if it is too cold it will not adhere. I suggest starting 10ºC below the specified temperature of the material and very slowly, wait for the piece to cool and try to remove it from the table, it should have the same adhesion as PETG.
Remembering that PP does not need to be cooled as it can warp. Turn off all part cooling fans. And if the HOTEND cooling fan blows, check if the air is very cold. If it is, you should consider modifying the wind flow with a deflector so it doesn't go straight to the part. If the wind is hot there is no problem, PP handles printing at high temperatures well.
You don't need a closed chamber to print PP, it's not like ABS, but if you have one it's better, the finish of the piece is slightly better, apart from the fact that it doesn't contaminate the adhesion surface of each layer with dust particles contained within. in the external environment.
Foodsaftey also depends on used colors! Not every color pigment is foodsafe.
For example: look at Biofusion filaments from extrudr, the basematerial is the same and foodsafe, but depending on the color, some ar FDA compliant, some not. Same to the Greentec (pro) series. They provide the infos on there boxes too which is great in mym opinion.
13:15 Hier kommen viele Fehler zusammen.
Zunächst sollte das Teil liegend gedruckt werden. Ja, stehend ist verlockend einfach, hat aber eine falsche Faserrichtung und die Layerhaftung muss die Kräfte aufnehmen.
Knicke sind immer eine mögliche Bruchstelle. Möglichst Radien verwenden. Am besten groß und ausladend. Von der Strömung her ist das auch besser.
Ein flexibles Element einbauen, dass das Teil beweglich ist. Zur Not mit einem Stück Schlauch.
Liegend war leider nicht möglich, da die Muffen während des Druckens (bei einer Pause) auf das Rohr gelegt werden mussten.
Bambu just released PPA CF. Is that the same thing?
No, PPA is a different polymer. I'll get to that in a future video.
I like yout methodical way of work, at first (sound) I tought it is Stefan (from CNC kitchen)'s video.
However, I found a logical error: as conclusion you said that PP printed pipe for hydrogen peroxide would resist interlayer adhesion stress regardless of your previous interlayer adhesion test which shows thad PP has lower Z-direction strength than PLA.
Also, it will be interesting to see comparison of PP with the other, much cheaper and much more 3d printing friendly, food friendly material: PCTG.
Please make similar tests with PCTG and put it in your charts.
I don't know, requires specialized build plate, slow extrusion, higher price, tendency to warp (which may be reduced when going for even pricier options), needs 120 bed just to remove, ... sure, may have some niche applications, but I don't think it is a good general option.
also you can mold resin with it. Since resin doesnt glue to it. So you can basically print it then mold what ever you want
Thank you! This is really great I'm going to try some out!
I would love to see a weight to tensile strength and other properties for difference types of filaments
I'll have to try it out. Currently I'm in love with ABS-GF
Price point is quite a downside thought. It feels like you would only use if you really needed the specific material properties.
Do you have all your test results-comparing other materials in a single place? Would a really nice resource.
Love the professional and scientific approach!
I am surprised how strong PLA is!
For some reason I always believed it to be one of the weaker/weakest 3D printing materials - yet the tensile strength test shows otherwise.
It would have been VERY interesting to see how an injection molded part of the same form would have faired under these tests.
Sehr gutes Video 🔥
Dankeschön!
I have been printing a lot of PP, PPCF and PPGF for a few years now and it is one of my favorites with PC CF.
There is a very simple and cheap solution for bed adhesion, get a 2mm plate of PP, cut to size or order in the correct size, sand it in two directions with 80grid paper
Heat it to ~35°C
Print first layer with a small Z offset ant lower temp to prevent it from fusing
Increase bed temp after first layer around 10°C against warping
I print PP at 215°C first and 230°C later layers
PP GF at 230°C first and 290°C later
PP CF at 215°C first and 280°C later
always sticks, never warps and gets off with a little force
3:32
In addition to regular pp, there is red and black
I think bambu is releasing this soon for the ams as well. I will buy it and see.
I’d like to see a comparison of PPA CF with PETG CF to see which one wins.
Beyond what the manufacturer says, you should try with the nozzle at 245º at that temperature, I have obtained the best results, at least in PP 😃🙋♂
Used for early 4wherker fenders it is very very durable
I have bambulab a1 with ams, and tried to print with verbatim PP. I just waste 1kg of it, it is warping so hard. I never had problem with ABS, PETG, ASA, PA12, and CF variant of these but PP is impossible for me...
Thank you, a great synopsis as alway.
PP is awesome. Built my house water system with it. Not printed parts though 😉
Great video!
Thank you!
P-Wipe your PP is a must after use. 2:05
Great video, but one important thing should be told to viewers.
Material being food safe doesnt mean the process is. FDM 3d printers cannot manufacture food safe products unfortunately.
Its not just the brass tip, that might have led in it, (you can anyway buy an iron one or stainless steel)
Its the lack of smoothness and layer lines that become a problem. Between the layers are unfortunately perfect spots for bacterial colony growth. My tech fun youtube channel did scientific tests.
Coating with food safe resin might work, but it is not an permanent solution as resin makes the surface smooth but it slowly may degrade.
You're absolutely right. I tried to explain this in 12:00
Useful information, and could see a bunch of uses for it potentially, but holy shirtballs it's expensive!
ist hier der gleiche inhalt wie in dem video von vor 7 monaten wo deinem deutsche kanal?
Ja, 1 zu 1. In der Zukunft werden die meisten neuen Videos in beiden Sprachen kommen, teils auch exklusive Videos auf Englisch oder Deutsch, je nach Zielgruppe.
But is it toxic or can you print it in your office?
The PP print stuf doesnt work at all on any of my raise3D machines. The best result is on a dedicated hard PP plate or PP packing tape. The PPprint surface/plate never gave me any usefull results. Maybe they fixed some stuff today... i bought a set 2-3 years ago and it is like i said useless. I produce a lot of stuff for chemical rich environments so PP is a must but saddly i always have to use PP tape or hard PP plate with magnets inside... I was really dissapointed. Good thing about PP is the chemical resistance + its kinda soft and bendy so its hard to break. Temperature is a problem though.
I've had similar issues with this product in the sample size printing for fuel cell and battery research. I'd love to chat with you about how you've been getting functional PP parts. Unfortunately I think the ultimate way to go about this is to move toward PP powder SLS in which none of the typical PP issues are deal breakers, although the cost barrier...
@@dmax9324 i just buught a bunch of 200x200mm PP plates and clamped them to the print bed. THe PP only sticks to PP so... THe adhesion is not a problem anymore. The bad side is that the plates deteriorate pretty quickly or you brake them when taking the prints off. PP brown packing tape is also a great option. I just put it over buildtak sometimes for smaller parts and it works wonders.
I bought from PPprint the set for my printer and i got everything the guy in the video got but the thing is useless. I never had any sucessfull print off of it.