Question about filament drying and over-drying?
 
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Question about filament drying and over-drying?  

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Neal
 Neal
(@neal-2)
Eminent Member
Question about filament drying and over-drying?

I am a new 3D printer user.   I have printed 4 items in PETG and 6 items in PLA.

I read somewhere that if you dry a filament for too long, it can become brittle and loose quality.  My home is near the ocean, and average humidity is 70 to 90%.  So the first few times I printed PETG (different days), I took the spool out of my storage container (approx 25% RH) and put it in the filament dryer at 60°C for 3 hours.  Then, after printing, I put the spool back in the storage box with desiccant.

Today it occurred to me:   If every time I want to print PETG, I take the spool and put it in the dryer for 3 hours, will I ruin the filament before I finish using up the spool?

Thanks for any education.

Neal

 

Posted : 08/10/2025 9:52 pm
hyiger
(@hyiger)
Prominent Member
RE: Question about filament drying and over-drying?

 

Posted by: @neal-2

I am a new 3D printer user.   I have printed 4 items in PETG and 6 items in PLA.

I read somewhere that if you dry a filament for too long, it can become brittle and loose quality.  My home is near the ocean, and average humidity is 70 to 90%.  So the first few times I printed PETG (different days), I took the spool out of my storage container (approx 25% RH) and put it in the filament dryer at 60°C for 3 hours.  Then, after printing, I put the spool back in the storage box with desiccant.

Today it occurred to me:   If every time I want to print PETG, I take the spool and put it in the dryer for 3 hours, will I ruin the filament before I finish using up the spool?

Thanks for any education.

Neal

 

If you keep the filament at 10-20% RH, you could probably go months or a year even without needing to dry it. Before putting in the dryer, do a test print first. If it shows obvious signs of being damp: popping or sizzling sounds, stringing, bubbly surface; only then put it in the dryer. 

"Some filaments feel the rain, others just get wet"

- Bob Marley

Posted : 08/10/2025 10:43 pm
Clark
(@clark)
Active Member
RE: Question about filament drying and over-drying?

Facing similar conditions, my approach is :

1/ store filaments in vacuum bags + desiccant 

2/ put into filament drier whilst printing 

3/ once print finished: returned immediately into vacuum bags

nothing scientific but works well for me 

 

Posted : 08/10/2025 11:31 pm
Diem
 Diem
(@diem)
Illustrious Member

I too live within walking distance of the sea ... Starting with perfectly dry filament I can see moisture problems by the end of a long print.

You are very unlikely to overdry filament, long before problems arise you will finish a 1kg spool; you *might* have problems with some 5 - 10 kg spools if you only print small parts and dry every time.

I generally aim for 10%RH but don't always succeed - but it's not the RH that matters, it's the absolute quantity of water in the filament, if there's enough to cause bubbles and oozing of the nozzle when idle, or if you see 'zits' of filament left by the bed levelling procedure - dry it.

Cheerio,

Posted : 09/10/2025 2:38 am
1 people liked
Myf
 Myf
(@myf)
Estimable Member
RE: Question about filament drying and over-drying?

Hello,

I live in a humid region: there's often 65% or 70% humidity in the air. I mainly print Chinese petg.

From time to time (every month or so) I put the spools of filament I'm going to use in a food dehydrator for 4 to 6 hours at 60°, the rest of the time they stay outside.

Last time I put 2 spools in the oven, and it was full. The heat was probably not well distributed, and part of the blue coil became very brittle (but not completely unusable), and the red coil dried as agreed. Next time I'll set the thermostat to 50° and put the 2 coils in the oven a little longer.

I hope I help you. 

F. ...and translated from French with DeepL.com

 

Posted : 10/10/2025 3:18 pm
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