I am using a Prusa i3 printer, and have been for about 6 months now and it has held up very well. However, recently I got some new PLA filament and have been having some issues, I have only had it out of the box for about 3 weeks now and it seemed to be working fine. But, now every time I print, the filament seems to work fine until I have finished. Now, after leaving my print resting on the bed, I find that after 2 hours or so, the filament begins to break in the PFTE tubing. And after leaving it over night, it is completely snapped loads of times into segments of about 1cm. (I must add at this point that my previous filament worked fine). This now leaves me the job of trying to get it out of the tubing which usually presents a struggle. I have now resorted to retracting all of the filament on to the reel after printing. I was wondering if anyone had a solution to my problem as it has become very time consuming… I was wondering whether it is simply a quality issue? …or maybe something else?
I have had exactly this issue with PLA that I got from Fry’s Electronics. It was fine for a couple weeks and then it started behaving this way. I did the same thing you did - put it back on the spool after every print. Since it was fine when it was first opened, I would have to assume that it has something to do with moisture.
I’m keeping my filament in a big plastic bag that has a valve to suck the air out with a vacuum now. I pack it with reusable moisture absorbing silica beads. Hopefully this will be the last roll I have to recycle. I’m not patient enough to mess with a problem like that.
I had this happen with voltivo excelfil black PLA filament. The company was helpful and replaced it but even the new filament does it. Not sure what is different about their formula. Fresh filament seems flexible but once it’s been straight for a few hours it is quite brittle.
Alot of people think that it’s a moisture absorption problem with pla but it’s not. It’s the mechanical stress of being straight after having been curled around the reel. If it was moisture it would continue to break along the air exposed filament but you will find that only the straight part breaks. Some filament brands are worse than others but filament from Frys is especially bad. Hatchbox filament works well in my experience.
Bit of a late reply, but hopes it helps anyone out there. Simply put cheaper graded pla snaps and becomes brittle.The actual extruding process to form the uniform diameter of filament is a stressful procedure on the filament itself. Quality filament after extrusion is destressed and coiled carefully with meticulous stages. If a cheaper filament is stored in different transitions of temperature then this will impact the printing quality and often cause jamming, sometimes even higher temps required up to 250deg.(yep on pla). If you unfortunately purchase what seems to be awkward stuff the best solution would be to bin it, if that’s not an option then store the roll at a constant temp ie.Main living room in the home as this is usually the warmest and most stable temperature room. And of course use it all up as quick as you can. I have cracked it with lots of trial and error and no longer buy the sub £15 filament. Hope this helps.
I had same problem and where I live really humid and I had to dry my pla constantly, and I don’t have low temp oven so I use heated bed which is perfect size for 1kg spool and temp controlled.
Just set temperature to 85 c cover over the bed with some kind box leave it for 3 hours.
Adding my 2 cents worth here. I don’t believe it to be a quality issue as I have had this exact problem with multiple rolls of filament from multiple name brand manufacturers. There is some minor credence lent to the theory of moisture as I live in Portland Oregon but the house is pretty dry in the summertime and the AC is running. The only thing I can really add to this thread is that I have ONLY EVER had this issue with black filament! I loaded up some clear and drained the roll with zero issues. The moment I load up black from the exact same manufacturer as the clear, the problem is back. I don’t believe it to be stress because the length of filament will break in 2 or sometimes 3 spots and today’s was less than 1" from the extruder feed inside of the head. I’m resolved to loading black, using it when I need it then sealing it back up and reloading something else.