Interested in reviews of Creality 1.75mm Ender-PLA 1kg Grey? It got 4.6 out of 5 stars from our customers. Find specific customer reviews of Creality 1.75mm Ender-PLA 1kg Grey below. We will appreciate if you also share your experiences with Creality 1.75mm Ender-PLA 1kg Grey after purchasing.
It is a cheaper but still decent material corresponding to the price and the stated parameters of the manufacturer.
If I need to print faster, I add about +5°C to the nozzle with this material and the layers hold fine.
The only thing that sometimes surprises me is that the string occasionally breaks by itself (straight clean break) but not during printing, but during storage, for example in the "dry box" and exactly at the point where the transition between the PTFE tube (which is at the outer end of the primer), while at the point of the transition the string is not stressed by the bending of the eye, it only touches the edge of the PTFE tube. It's happening to me with these Creality-Ender and one other cheap brand. But by the fact that it doesn't happen during printing, but only during storage, it's basically no big deal and the printing filament is actually perfectly fine. Somehow I have no idea why so many users here (and in the filament discussions) complain so much about the seemingly ugly winding, when it has no effect directly on the actual printing (assuming the manufacturer wound it properly cooled and did not deform the filament when wound over the filament at a more pronounced angle). For example, "crossing the thread" during unwinding is no longer possible in principle - unless the end of the thread escapes during handling and the end gets "under the other loop". Furthermore, the much mentioned "twisting" is not a defect of the manufacturer, but rather a part of the user, that on a spool with a looser winding, there is too much rolling resistance between the spool holder/stand and the spool itself, and so when unwinding, the unwound string sometimes gets "cut/tightened" between the looser wound others on the spool. So it's still not so much a defect in the product as it is in the way the user uses the product with respect to its inherent properties. Yes, if the winding was nicer to the eye, i.e. tighter, these "side effects" are a thing of the past for some. But there is a price to pay for "beauty"; -)
I print quite a lot, with different materials, different nozzle diameters from 0.1 to 1.0mm, from the cheapest to the most expensive materials, and there has never been any mechanical problem of unwinding during printing because of the way the winding is done.
I don't mean to accuse anyone of anything, but I am just stating my experience of printing from many hundreds of different spools and wondering how someone can't manage such a simple thing as unwinding the filament from the spool.
I bought 3 spools of this filament for my company and they were all so badly wound that the filament always jammed after 5 hours of printing, lots of crossing in the filament winding on the spool. Terrible. I don't know if I was just unlucky, but it happened with all three !
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