Amazon Basics PLA 3D Printer Filament, 1.75mm, Black, 1 kg
Amazon Basics PLA 3D Printer Filament, 1.75mm, Black, 1 kg Spool
Care Instructions
Return any unused filament back to its resealable bag for future use and to ensure secure, optimal containment.
Weight: | 1 kg |
Size: | 1 Spool |
Dimensions: | 21.51 x 8.51 x 20.5 cm; 1 Kilograms |
Model: | PLA175bk1000 |
Part: | PLA175bk1000 |
Colour: | Black |
Pack Quantity: | 1 |
Batteries Required: | No |
Manufacture: | Amazon Basics |
Dimensions: | 21.51 x 8.51 x 20.5 cm; 1 Kilograms |
Quantity: | 1 |
Size: | 1 Spool |
Cheapest PLA amazon had. I didn’t care about the colour, just needed something inexpensive and quickly. Without doubt the best filament I’ve ever used on my anycubic. Hotend set for 210, bed for 60. Will definitely buy again.
Never printed a flexible material before, however this seems to be a decent choice. Its not very elastic, but it is very flexible and bendable. Prints OK as well. Pretty clean prints, not as smooth as PLA but wasn’t expecting it to be. Still all features can be made out without issue so would happily buy again.
Better quality than I expected, prints just fine, just use some glue and don’t use a Brim or Raft.
Well packaged , comes with a great ziplock bag for storing when not in use , A+
I purchased this TPU filament to 3D print some phone cases. I set the temperature at the recommended 210c with the bed heating element switch off. I have to say the print was excellent! There was very little clean up, a few minor bits of stringing around the camera lens cut out and charger port, but the filament literally brushed away by hand. I wasn’t expecting much of a sheen with this filament however it really does have a silk look to it. Really impressed and will definitely be buying this again!
I hope that you found my review helpful
Stuff just flows, gives a great finish, can’t really fault i
Using the red TPU and it prints very well. So far tested making a few cable ties and a 40x40x2 mm cube. Sticks well to the bed and prints with good dimensional accuracy. Flexible as expected, stretches a little, and well with a model designed to stretch (such as cable tie with loops).
Settings:
Nozzle: 0.4 on a direct drive
Temp: 220c and 210c (no problems with either)
Bed: off
Speed: 60mm/s to 5mm/s (for short loops, probably could go faster)
Retr: 3mm (didn’t do a retraction test so could be suboptimal)
Worked well, 60c bed 200c extruder. Not keen on the finish, this might just be what silk is like but knocked it down 1 star as I don’t like the finish.
Not TPU more like PLA I was after TPU, prints well and looks nice, so yes I will buy more. I printed on E3D-V2.
Absolutely perfect TPU for the price, Would deffo buy this brand agai
I was not expecting the best with it being an Amazon Basic pack but how surprised was I.
I absolutely love this stuff and have yet to run into any problems with it. (That is probably the kiss of death on them now)
I will most definitely be buying again in the future.
I was not expecting the best with it being an Amazon Basic pack but how surprised was I.
I absolutely love this stuff and have yet to run into any problems with it. (That is probably the kiss of death on them now)
I will most definitely be buying again in the future.
I really like this filament, hardly any printer tuning required, little to no stringing and the colour is a really nice quality. Would definitely order Amazon filament again 🙂
Prints well enough. Seems a little stringier than some, probably my settings (new to 3d printing), perhaps I let it get damp. Nice colour, good layer adhesion.
I wasn’t expect too much from this product, however, I was pleasantly surprised. It prints very well, nothing messy and not overly shiny
This filament need a 0.8 nozzle. And very stringy but it does work quite well.
New to 3d printing, wanted some cheap filament to start with, but this turned out souch better than I thought it would, ender 3 pro using Cura default profiles, very good stuff 🙂
The spool arrived nicely packed in the usual vacuum packaging, along with a spare ziplock bag to keep it in after opening. Installed into the Anycubic Kobra without any fuss, ensuring the feed roller tension was lowered.
Printed an Oculus Touch grip from Thingiverse at 210c on the head 50c on the table at 40mm/s. Sliced in Cura 0.2mm per layer with the minimise travel option selected and 0.5mm retraction.
Took longer than PLA at 120mm/s, but that’s to be expected but produced a really well finished grip with smooth details.
Printed to the reverse side of the PEI plate, as I’ve read TPU can damage the PEI surface, and it adhered without issue and removed easily afterwards.
Would be nice if the spool/product info included hardness info, as it was, went with the default 95A Generic TPU option in Cura and seemed to have no problems.
This filament runs incredibly well, even when it has been exposed to moisture, and the glow is similar in brightness to most injection molded plastics.
I bought a reel that had been returned by someone , whilst brittle when it arrived it ran better than my other filaments out of my Prussia I3, and didn’t suffer from then typical issue of water boiling in the filament when not kept in a dry environment.
If you don’t use your printer that often, or you don’t have a dry box this may be the filament for you.
TPU is interesting filament, have been enjoying seeing what settings and prints I can get to work on this.
Seen some reviews / comments about stringyness but I haven’t had a single issue with this TPU filament.
If your interested in TPU filament, this is a very good option. Would recommend.
*Note: Using Ender 3 3D printer.
The label on the spool says the nozzle temperature should be between 210 and 230 DegC. I printed at 200 for the first layer and 190 for subsequent layers with a bed at 50. It will string much more than other filaments necessitating the removal of z lift/hop and increasing retraction to 3mm. Compared to other much more flexible filaments I achieved a good result with a tiny amount of stringing.
This was my 1st spool I bought after using some of the free sample included with my 3d printer.
I found the adhesion to be slightly inferior that what i had previously used.
I adjusted a few settings ( lowered the Z axis) and heated the print bed a little more and it all seems to wok perfectly.
It might be worth keeping note on every brand of filament so you can fine tune it next time you use it.
I did find it was wound slightly badly and got tangled at 1st, but that soon cleared up.
The Silver is a great finish and colour. I’ve had not blockages so far and I’m about half way thru.
Like I say, my only note would be to keep the temperature nice and warm when using.
Using a Prusa i3 Mk3s which includes filament settings on the slicer software. Printed camera mounts with 0.15mm layer height. Prints reliably and cleanly with no failures so far.
Adhesion is always spot on at 60 degrees. The colour is always good if used at a lower temp (190) and the accuracy is good. I’ve had a lot of issues with other brand filament, spent hours trying to fix it and changed to this one and it printed perfect. I’ll stick to this now.
I did not find this one work as well as others, that being said it’s just as likely to be a quirk of my printer. It’s well wound and good value once you can adjust to do enough to print. Find it better if I lowered the bed temperature
I’ve bought loads of Amazon basics filament over the last 6 months and with 1 exception the quality has always been good. The one that wasn’t I suspect had absordbed water as the plastic film it comes in was damaged. A few hours in a low over sorted that ou
While I haven’t been 3D printing for long, it’s literally opened up doors that I had previously never imagined possible. Pictured is one of my ribbon microphone tools (you can find these on Thingiverse as they are fully open source hardware). This particular tool corrugates the ribbon between two closely meshed gears. This was printed on a TronXY Pro 2 printer (similar to an Ender 3 but with fairly old, and buggy, Marlin software) and a stock 0.4mm nozzle.
Despite that the prints are pretty much faultless. Bed adhesion (heated) was good and the filament performs well at a range of temperatures. This pearl lustre is pleasant and while this filament was surprisingly good for the price and produced mostly tools (I bought this instead of white by mistake) it should be excellent for decorative prints and lithophanes.
What really surprised me was the addition of simple but thoughtful things that I hadn’t imagined would come att his price: specifically a re-sealable bag and some moisture absorbent material in the reel! This is really neat because unless you’ve heard about the vacuum cleaner bag trick, it will allow you to store your PLA for months at a time when not in use and not end up as wetter than my washing when I left it out in the rain *(again).
PLA isn’t the worst offender for its hygroscopic properties (nylon takes that crown) but it is still prone to it, particularly in the summer months when air is holding more moisture.
Absolutely terrible at the recommended 200 degree temperatures with awful adhesion, however stepping up all the way up to 235 seems to have solved these issues and has been printing well since, so if you’re having problems just step up the hea
So I thought I would give amazon basics ago. I was after next delivery, and colour of yellow to print some parts to modify my Ender 5.
So turns up next day, thumbs up, colour a lovely vibrant yellow, thumbs up.
Set printer off, about a 3 and 1/2 hour job. Watching via octoprint looking good. No or very little stringing (head 205, bed 60 btw). Looking good.
So heads to garage to have eyes on, here is where my gripe comes in. The smell, I’ve used esun, and dreality own filament previously and they were very subtle in what smell they produced. This how is way more pungent.
No worries really, just not going to stay in garage, and vent it later when the print is finished.
I tried the filament in green color. Bought really at a low price, I didn’t expect much and instead I had to change my mind.
I mostly tested the filament to print pots of different sizes and the organizer for the zombicide green horde board game.
The filament works well at 190 degrees, I found some difficulties with adhesion to the print bed but nothing unsolvable by setting the heated bed to 60 degrees.
The thread is surprisingly well coiled to the spool, which allows for a uniform print flow. I did some test prints with the calibration cubes and after some adjustments I got more than decent prints. I currently use anycubic filaments which have a better yield, however in the future when I have to print large and not very detailed objects my choice will surely fall on this filament.
For a cheaper quality filament this was pretty good. Bed adhesion was a little difficult on my heated glass bed but once the settings were further refined and a slower more squished first layer it improved. Model permitting though I would chose to use a raft or large brim with this filament.
Thickness variation seems very small so once the initial adhesion problems were sorted the print quality is very good. Translucency is very good and also the PLA is reactive to UV and blue light which has a nice effect. This works well using it to print illuminated buttons.
Some filiments you get and it sends whatever you do to the settings they just print well, others you get and they are buggers and you spend ages trying to get the settings right for the stuff. This is somewhere in the middle, it took a fair bit of tweaking on my any cubic mega to get it past the first few layers without turning into a birds nest, but has been ok since. If you want an easy set up I’d probably avoid but if your used to messing around with settings it’s decent enough.
This filament caused only one issue on my Prusa mk3 where is bed adhesion was sub par. Some prit stick fixed that issue but I don’t normally have to use that for PLA but for the price that’s a compromise I’m willing to make.
I purchased this mainly to find put how my Sidewinder X1 printed and how to set it up.
And it worked a treat once is switched to PursaSlicer as it has this filament as one of its preset filaments.
I have no issues with filament snapping of jamming and about to finish this reel. Reel is wound well and unwinds with no issues. It also comes with a Ziplock/seal able bag to reseal the filament when not in use.
I have a reel of the blue filament on order now to see if there is any difference.
I bought this as needed an ivory colour for printing skulls and most others were very expensive.
This prints very nice, spooled very nice and packed well. Standard temperatures of 210 and 60 for me with no issues or tuning needed.
Only weird thing is there is a massive waste of a 3d printing paper booklet included with the filament? Strange as I’ve never had it with any others, and also a massive waste for people who buy massive quantities. I guess there is recycling but it’s probably best with a single sheet and a link to an online pdf?
So i’ve a few hours working with this PLA. I own an Ender 3 and CR-10Pro v2 on both machines i had dialled in my settings perfectly (always used sunlu pla) however that didn’t cut it because this material requires some tweaking of settings to get it right so ignore all your settings you have for other PLA/material and dial them in once more. To get that ideal squish of filament you are going to have to push the temp slightly higher (210c is what i’ve found best in my case, of course this varies on your ambient temps so its something you have to play around with) I also had to drop the z height of the printing head to much lower than i did with Sunlu PLA. If you can start a test print at 50% speed and dial the Z height in as you go then you will find the ideal height for this.
I was ready to write this PLA off and return it but i’m glad i didn’t because it does produce good prints. I wouldn’t say its perfect due to the extra steps you need to take in order to get it going but for the price (45 for 3 rolls) i can’t complain. Will it be my go to for PLA? I don’t think so but with how prices are fluctuating right now with Sunlu material its a good interim until prices settle again.
Used it for 3d printed photos and models, so far so good.. will be my go to brand if price drops due to the prime delivery and quality.. have nothing bad to say about it, i print at 60c bed and 210c nozzle temps and use creality ender 3 and cr10 s5 mk8 hotend (stock) i have easily 100hrs+ experience with this pla and have bought multiple rolls of i
This product is great value for money. But the description specified neon green and not translucent green. I am happy with the overall product but very disappointed as this product is not what I had in mind for intention of use. After receiving the item I read some reviews and soon I saw that I am not the only one to be disappointed with receiving this item. Therefore I please ask you to amend the title and/or description of this product stating that it is translucent.
Thank you
Will
First a bit of a qualifier – I’ve not been printing anything complex with these, it’s been used to make face mask holding comfort strips, so the prints are basic and not very high at all. However with that in mind I can say that it’s been perfect, no issues with this PLA at all.
It’s a bog standard black as you’d expect so I can’t really say much more than that – no issues with adhesion to the base plate, it’s all been feeding through with no issues etc. I’m about 3/4 of the way through the reel now so assuming there’s no last minute disasters with it it’s been great value for money and I’ll certainly be returning to the Amazon Basics range again for more PLA.
I saw a lot of negative reviews around this basics filament, so was unsure whether to buy it or not. Got this spool for under 17, great value. Exactly the same spools used as 3DJake Eco range so I assume the same suppliers.
I am a novice printer, had my Prusa MK3 for about 1 month. I sliced using default Prusa slicer settings, 215C, 60C and had no issues what so ever, no problem sticking to the bed, no imperfections in the print quality.
I’ve attached a video of my first print.
Hi, usually i dont write reviews , becuase English is not my nativ language. But because of some small details on this filament from Amazon Basics i really want to write one. First of all i posted a few pictures with the product, for who really want to check it before buying it. I wanted to buy a cheap fillament for a beginer like me, i wanted to buy this cheap filament so i can use it for some small projects, and because it was cheap i wanted to see 1 spool and after that to order a few extra more.
I do have a ENDER 3 3D printer.. my setting for this are 205celsius nozzle and 82celsius Bed. I have a glass bed, and for good adhesive i wash it before each print i make.
Pros : – good for the money
– good for who want to use more than 1 spool for small projects, and dont want to invest into expensive fillaments.
Cons. – (this is for the guys who makes this fillament)
– Please STOP using such a big `instruction manual` for the filament, and dont waste paper for it. It dosnt worth.
– IT should be in vacuum bag, but as you can see in the pictures it missed the part of `Vacuum`, it is only in the transparent foil.
Overall 4 stars from me.
This filament is great for what you pay for it however, as other people say it is constantly below 1.75mm and does have mild problems with adhesion so you will need to use extra adhesive (standard hairspray/gluestick tricks).
As an FYI to other users as well online, the spool has a weight of 232g for leftovers estimatio
I struggled with this one initially, until I discovered that the average diameter is more like 1.70mm rather than 1.75mm. It is, however *consistently* undersized so you can just crank up your flow rate to compensate. The actual extrusion is more consistent than other cheap brands I’ve tried.
It seems more prone to stringing and oozing than other filaments, so don’t print hot (I’m at 200C atm, might drop down further). Retraction may need adjusting.
It is, as another user pointed out, prone to adhesion problems. My bed is fairly good for adhesion, so as long as I have enough squish it sticks. Small parts need a brim. But I can imagine this filament being a nightmare on glass compared to others.
Colour wise, for single layers it just looks like a darkish translucent green, but after a few more layers it really brightens up, but also becomes more opaque (like most translucent filaments do due to refraction). A thick printed part with lots of infill and walls will look REALLY bright, practically fluorescent. This makes me wonder about the lightfastedness of the pigment…only time will tell. The final colour is on the more yellow side of the green hue spectrum. Note that you will be able to see infill with this filament, so if aesthetics are more important than strength, choose your infill pattern wisely.
It seems surprisingly strong and prints surprisingly well for a budget filament. I will be ordering more Amazon Basics reels if they’re all this good for the money. Far better than e.g. Geeetech PLA.
I used this filament in a Wanhao i3+. Quality of prints was good and no issues with bed adhesion or nozzle clogging.
Pearlescent colour was OK but not as glossy as expected from the description.
The reasons I have marked it down a star is the lack of a resealable bag (supplied in shrink wrap) and the underwhelming “its spool includes a built-in gauge, which shows both the percentage of material remaining and the approximate length remaining” which is just the standard slot that every other spool I have ever purchased has – no marking for weight or length and useless at start and end of the reel.
I would say that this is a better budget choice than the low end Chinese brands, but is neither as cheap as them or as good as the high end brands.
You make your choice based on your needs