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ABS print settings Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene

A durable, heat-resistant engineering plastic that can be acetone-smoothed — but it warps hard and emits fumes (styrene), so an enclosure and ventilation are effectively required. Higher nozzle and bed temps, minimal part cooling. Being displaced by ASA for outdoor work, but still the classic for tough indoor parts.

Nozzle (all brands)
230–270 °C
Bed (all brands)
80–110 °C
Enclosure
Required
Cooling fan
none
Starting points, not gospel. ABS settings vary by brand, printer and slicer. Run a temperature tower on each new spool. Every per-brand number below is the manufacturer's own published recommendation with a dated source.

ABS settings by brand

FilamentMaterialNozzleBedMax speedEnclosureSource
Polymaker PolyLite ABSPolymaker ABS 245–265 °C 90–100 °C n/p Required src Achecked 2026-06-10
Bambu Lab ABSBambu Lab ABS 240–270 °C 80–100 °C n/p Required src Achecked 2026-06-10
eSUN ABS+eSUN ABS 230–270 °C 80–110 °C ≤ 300 Required src Achecked 2026-06-10

Click any filament for the full spec sheet and source link. “n/p” = not published by the manufacturer.

What ABS is good (and bad) for

Good for
  • Durable indoor functional parts
  • Parts needing heat resistance
  • Acetone vapor-smoothed finishes
Avoid for
  • Printing without an enclosure
  • Poorly ventilated rooms (fumes)
  • Large flat parts prone to warping
  • Long-term UV/outdoor exposure (use ASA)

Drying & storage

ABS picks up moisture; dry ~80 °C for 6–8 h if layer adhesion is poor or the filament is brittle. Store sealed.

Bed adhesion

Use a heated bed 90–110 °C, an enclosure, and an adhesion aid (ABS slurry, glue stick, or a textured/engineering plate). Draft-free is critical to avoid warping and cracking.

Heat resistance

High. Glass transition ~100 °C — suitable for warm environments and under-hood-adjacent indoor parts.

Compare ABS with other materials

ABS FAQ

What temperature do you print ABS at?

Across the 3 ABS filaments in this database, manufacturers recommend nozzle temperatures of 230–270 °C and bed temperatures of 80–110 °C. Exact values are per-brand (see the table); always run a temperature tower on a new spool.

Does ABS need an enclosure?

Yes — ABS warps and can crack without a stable, draft-free chamber. An enclosure (and good ventilation for ABS) is effectively required.

How do you dry ABS?

ABS picks up moisture; dry ~80 °C for 6–8 h if layer adhesion is poor or the filament is brittle. Store sealed.

How heat-resistant is ABS?

High. Glass transition ~100 °C — suitable for warm environments and under-hood-adjacent indoor parts.