Print with Power! 💥
The DURAMIC 3D PLA Plus Filament is a premium 1.75mm white filament made from high-purity USA materials, offering 8 times the impact strength and exceptional dimensional accuracy. With a user-friendly cardboard spool and patented jam-free technology, this filament is designed for both performance and sustainability, making it the ideal choice for professional 3D printing.
Manufacturer | DURAMIC 3D |
Brand | DURAMIC 3D |
Item Weight | 2.2 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 7.87 x 7.87 x 2.6 inches |
Color | 1kg White |
Material Type | Polylactic Acid |
Number of Items | 1 |
Manufacturer Part Number | PLA PLUS-WHT-US |
R**L
It’s actually great!
I just finished my first print using PLA Plus White. I never liked the quality of white PLA and I remember telling myself I will never use while PLA again in My life, but I got the best print ever using this product. I had to spend about 4 hours dialing in my printer to get a good large print like this but I did smaller calibration prints without making any changes to the printer setting vs regular PLA and they came out really good as well. Those were printed on Ender 3 Pro. 215 nozzle/63 bed temps. I’m very excited for this filament as I will need a lot of it for my honey comb wall storage project.Before I got the printer dialed in, the large prints were coming off really bad, I’ve added a picture as well. Some of the things I had to do was wash the bed with dish soap, and then rubbing alcohol, air dry it. Drop the nozzle really close to the bed, so even paper notes would not fit between the bed and the nozzle, also dropped layer height from 0.2 to 1.2 and replaced my hot end nozzle to brand new one as I couldn’t get a proper fit extrusion even with cold pulls, some of my old PLA just wouldn’t come out completely. But now I’m getting perfect prints with this PLA plus and looking forward to doing a lot more prints with it. Changed my mind about using white PLA too!
D**W
A Long Overdue Review of Duramic PLA
This is a review I've been meaning to do for a year now... but as an "after hours" professional I wanted to wait until I could truthfully speak my mind about any brand of PLA. Durmaic had this big bold claim back in the day about becoming your "go to" filament if you gave them a chance... well, I have to admit they were right. To give you my back story- I run a small game design, music product, and 3d printing brand called "Fishwife Games". I primarily sell stuff via a tabletop role playing game distribution site, and all my stuff is download digital format. In the interest of 3d printing, I design and sell STL files- still, I need to test print what I sell before it goes up for purchase and download.I do try different brands of PLA to see what problems can occur, just as much as I've tried different 3d printers. When it comes to not wanting to deal with the hassles now, and my own stuff- I keep rolls of Duramic PLA hooked up to the 3d printers. Hatchbox I'll admit runs along side from time to time, but I've gotten so that I prefer Duramic.Duramic has a pretty good balance of what I call "chewiness"... its not very brittle- but then not so "chewy" (or bendy, or whatever you want to call it) that there's a sacrifice on detail or difficulty in cleaning up small parts. Now- while we are talking about small parts- that's the win for me. What I design in stuff for miniature gaming- things are set on what is called "28mm scale (to 30mm or "classic 28mm")"... which means stuff is roughly at a 1:64 normal scale... a lot of detail, very small, very easy to break with trying to get the supports off during clean up (yeah, most stuff requires supports- I prefer Tree supports myself). These elements matter- from tiny detail to forgiveness when my tired old eyes and clumsy hands are trying to remove something off a 2 hour+ print without breaking it. Some filaments I've had to give up on, so far Duramic has come in through.I must say if asked about the difference between PLA and PLA Plus with Duramic I haven't really come to a conclusion yet- I'll leave that to the manufacturer to answer.I've provided some images of some of the custom things that I've designed and test printed. While alot of it will end up being flat blacked and painted over I must say that color matters when you are taking sample photos. That's what I want to finish up talking about. All Duramic filament has been good to me, don't get me wrong, but if you are going to do some small detail stuff like this, and unpainted at that, then color selection can matter.I have several colors of Duramic lying in inventory but so far I've only used the light green, gray, silver (not silk), cyanblue, and yellow. I'll give my ratings for each below based on my particular needs.Early Winner- Cyanblue! See the little blue robot- that's the only thing I've printed so far with this color but WOW do the details pop with it! the cyanblue pulls in the right amount of light and shading. I don't know how well it is yet with hiding filing and clip off points but it certainly does a good job representing the little details. Its a nice color, and it pulls in light well.Reliable Winner- I love the light green. I've just finished my first roll of it and I have at least two or three more waiting under my work table. It shows just enough details under the light while also hiding blemishes well. Detail does pale in comparison to that blue, but if you are worried about the little nicks, sanding scuff marks, etc. showing up too much then go with the light green.Old Standard- Gray. A medium gray is generally the standard tone for printing small miniatures and such due to its ability to show details well in light. Sometimes it tends to show the imperfections a bit more so I prefer the light green. Still, if you need a good medium, go with gray.Not So Sure About- Yellow. The little mushroom is the first thing I've printed with my new yellow roll and I'm not so sure about it. I must say that this is not Duramic's fault- yellow is not the easiest on showing off small details as far as colors go. It will be fine once a coat of flat black is on it, but for an unpainted show off tone I don't know if I'd recommend it for small miniatures. I still plan to run through the roll though.Least Fave I Have To Admit- Silver (not silk). Like yellow, this is not really the manufacturers fault. I also must say that I've done some larger, non-gaming pieces in this plastic that turned out beautifully. What i have found with the silver though is that it is bad for showing off sanding blemishes and other assorted printing/clean up imperfections. You know how plastic tends to "whiten" a bit when it bends or something is scrapped against it?- the silver does this well. Granted, its not a bad plastic- I'll finish out the roll- but for here on out I'll probably avoid it unless I'm doing stuff that is bigger and calls for a metallic look unpainted.All that said above, I have to give Duramic 5 stars. Put a little thought into color if you can when doing high detail work- but otherwise the filament should continue to be a reliable "go to" as they claim.
E**C
Did not disappoint - excellent value and quality!
This was my first time trying any DURAMIC filament and it did not disappoint! I purchased the DURAMIC 3D PLA Plus Copper filament. I intend to use it for prints that are supposed to look metallic, but I also tested it printing a turkey as I don't have brown yet.On the first print, the turkey pictured, it printed much perfectly without any changes to my profiles. I printed it up to 250 mm/s (well over the advertised print speed listed on the spool) with an initial layer temperature of 230 and the rest at 210. Came out exactly how expected with no issues.I then printed the attached screwdriver bit holder keychain. The copper color looks great on an item like that and actually does look metallic. Same print settings for that one, and it turned out perfect. It had no issue on the little details, including the knurled base and the threads.The resulting prints have a metallic sheen to them and glisten as though there are tiny copper flakes in them.Also, the spool has a little gauge on it so you can estimate the amount of filament left in both grams and millimeters, which is great for quickly getting an idea if you have enough filament left for a print.The price to quality ratio on this is off the charts and I've already purchased additional colors/styles of DURAMIC filament - looking forward to testing them out! I highly recommend this filament!
B**Y
Excellent quality material.
This filament is incredibly easy to print, and very strong for PLA, works great for hangers, wall mounts, and just about any other project for a beginner printer.
J**E
Regular PLA Plus is Great, Marble PLA is not so great
I previously ordered black PLA plus which has worked great for me, it is easy to print, has great strength, and is generally just a good overall filament for the price.Since I liked it so much I decided to order the marble version, the marble version seems to print well but it has a distinct blue hue which has been bothering me. When you place marble prints next to regular white prints it has a distinct blue hue, this is also noticeable against white walls. If you're looking for filament that looks closer to marble I would looks elsewhere.
T**N
Great product
Great pla, prints look good bed adhesion is great no extra steps to make adhesion to pei sheet. Recommend to the 3d community.
C**.
Always prints
Repeat customer here! I've purchased PLA Plus Filament multiple times, and it consistently delivers. Prints come out smooth and clean. Currently using it on a Bambu at 219 degrees, and the results are top-notch. If you're looking for reliable filament for your 3D prints, this one's a solid choice. 🌟🖨️
N**.
Good trouble free filament
It's good filament for your everyday printing. It was well wound, and so didn't cause any jams or problems.
S**M
Great Filament and Colour (Denim)
I love this spool of Denim PLA+. It printed fine details beautifully, this crystal catto is only 3.5cm tall and printed with a 0.4mm nozzle. Good details, no smearing, and seems to be pretty strong.Some colours of Duramic PLA+ are very matt as well, somewhere between matt and satin like a smooth clay urn. Very nice.As far as PLA+ goes, Duramic seems to be a touch more ductile than my usual filament; In theory this should give it very good impact resistance but may also mean some loss of tensile strength. For comparison I also stock rolls that are 100% Ingeo 870 polymer (An industry standard for PLA+), If I bend thin walled parts the Duramic seems to yield a little more readily, but the Ingeo prints are more likely to snap suddenly. I printed shelf parts using both and the other brand seemed more rigid while Duramic likes to flex a bit. Both are good filaments and produce strong prints.[Update]Colours I've tried:Denim - PLA+ Prints as expected, very nice finish and colour.Purple - PLA+ Prints as expected.Light Green - Good colour, the same pistachio green as ice cream or pudding. This one oozes/strings a bit more and has a bit of trouble sticking to ultrabase. May need to dial in settings specifically for this colour. It would be nice if they had the same colour in PLA+Silver - PLA+ Prints as expected
D**L
Filament is great
Filament is great , and yes it from creality , spool was well vaccumed as it should be and packaging has 3 layer. I printed on maximum layer height 0.28 , and it still looks great.
A**Z
A beginner's perspective
Update Jan 21 2024:It turned out the spool was having a hard time turning freely on the holder and that's what was triggering the jammed nozzle error. After printing a plastic insert all problems were solved.I've also attached a picture of a print where I ran out of Duramic white and switched to Sunlu white for the remaining. The difference is day and night. Duramic filament has a lot more pigments in it and looks more solid. In comparison the Sunlu filament looks a bit see through and not that white.I tried to capture the difference in the photos. The top part is Sunlu and bottom is Duramic.-----I just bought an A1 Mini. This was the first filament I bought. The first few small prints went great. As I got more confident, I added more items on the bed to print at the same time. Made some mistakes that resulted in waste. I kept getting the warning that the nozzle is clogged. This got really bad towards the end of the filament when there was only 100g left on the spool. The print kept stopping every 4 minutes or so. Very annoying.Sometimes clicking retry fixes it. Other times I have to push the filament forward as I click retry to make it go through.I have bought two spools and I'm about to finished the first spool. Will update this review if the second spool experience is any different.as I was typing this, it kept jamming the nozzle. fixed it a couple times and it jammed again after ten seconds of printing. I just put the new spool on. The remaining will probably just be waste?I have also bought Sunlu's white filament. Let's see how the two compare for the A1 Mini.
S**N
Really nice filament for the price
It served the purpose, sticking well on the surface and good white color,
Y**.
Good
Prints well, finish is also good.
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