This is exciting and I will likely try it. However, 100mm/s is a bit meaningless unless you know the layer thickness and width, which doesn't seem to be provided. Can you provide the flow rate in mm3/s or provide the layer thickness and width?
Is there a recommended retraction speed and coasting cut-off distance to reduce oozing? I'm getting oozing at 200F resting temp while my support mtrl runs. Maybe I should turn that temp down
If this is true then this is fantastic news. Thank you for the heads up. The black TPU95-HF Might be perfect for printing the full scale Robby the Robot gloves on my Robothut channel.
It depends what you mean by "very hard". The current industry standard for "flexible" filament is 95A which can be stretch more than 4 times its original length. If you have experience with our regular PolyFlex™ TPU95, PolyFlex™ TPU95-HF is almost identical.
Funny, before this I commented that I am currently printing parts at 80mm/s on an sv06 using Sunlu TPU 95a filament, the same settings I use for PLA and have had zero issues, pretty sure I could go faster but haven't tried. I actually accidently had my speeds set to PLA settings a while ago by accident and found it prints perfectly well. I always used to slow down for TPU but I guess the speeds are fine, at least on a decent direct drive extruder. I am going to try it on one of my ender 3's (original, bowden style) sometime just for fun and see how fast it can go. Not sure about other TPU's, but the sunlu seems to be really forgiving. Nothing against Polymaker though, they make great filament.
This is exciting and I will likely try it. However, 100mm/s is a bit meaningless unless you know the layer thickness and width, which doesn't seem to be provided. Can you provide the flow rate in mm3/s or provide the layer thickness and width?
That's pretty cool. Now I would like to see what kind of speed they could do with Hemera (assuming e3d ever has them in stock again).
Actually the material can go faster on the Ender 3 but the printer struggled above 100mm/s :)
Printing a part out of sunlu TPU 95a at 220c 80mm/s on an sv06, zero issues.
Fastest Ive ever gone is 70mms, 100mms is OUTSTANDING🙏🙏🙏😎
Is there a recommended retraction speed and coasting cut-off distance to reduce oozing?
I'm getting oozing at 200F resting temp while my support mtrl runs. Maybe I should turn that temp down
200f seems awfully low, did you mean c?
Seems good for printing some wheels! I have some custom wheels I need to design...
I always printed any tpu with 80mm/s
If this is true then this is fantastic news. Thank you for the heads up. The black TPU95-HF Might be perfect for printing the full scale Robby the Robot gloves on my Robothut channel.
I’d love to see it on 60mm bridges
Yes but 95A is still a very hard filament and even though it might be TPU based it is not very flexible and stretchable.
I think 90% of the flexible filament out there are 95A (I think thats the standard at the moment)
It depends what you mean by "very hard". The current industry standard for "flexible" filament is 95A which can be stretch more than 4 times its original length. If you have experience with our regular PolyFlex™ TPU95, PolyFlex™ TPU95-HF is almost identical.
@@Polymakerdo you guys have 60A tpu ?
What setting did you use?
Just WOW!
where did u find the test print, the one with the infill can you provide a link
Set number of top layers to 0
Wooow i think i will buy one but can i print i on amycubic i3 mega s???
120 on sherpa extruder. Flsun sr klipper:)
But is it food safe? :P
It is UV resistance ;)
Cheap Sunlu tpu is better and can print fast as well.
🙂
Funny, before this I commented that I am currently printing parts at 80mm/s on an sv06 using Sunlu TPU 95a filament, the same settings I use for PLA and have had zero issues, pretty sure I could go faster but haven't tried. I actually accidently had my speeds set to PLA settings a while ago by accident and found it prints perfectly well. I always used to slow down for TPU but I guess the speeds are fine, at least on a decent direct drive extruder. I am going to try it on one of my ender 3's (original, bowden style) sometime just for fun and see how fast it can go. Not sure about other TPU's, but the sunlu seems to be really forgiving. Nothing against Polymaker though, they make great filament.