How to Fix Warping in 3D Prints

How to Fix Warping in 3D Prints

Why prints warp

Filament shrinks as it cools from print temperature to room temperature. The bottom layers cool first and try to contract, but they are stuck to the bed. The internal stress shows up as the corners curling upwards or the whole print popping off.

Fix 1: bed adhesion

  • Clean the bed with isopropyl alcohol
  • PEI sheet for PLA and PETG
  • Glue stick or ABS slurry for ABS and ASA
  • Correct first layer height (squish a little)
  • Bed temp at the higher end of the material's range

Fix 2: brims and mouse ears

A brim is a single-layer skirt that sticks to the bed and holds the print down. 5 to 8 mm wide is usually enough for PLA and PETG; 10 to 15 mm for ABS. For tall thin geometry, add 'mouse ears' (small flat disks at the corners) in your slicer or by hand-modelling.

Fix 3: kill the drafts

  • ABS and ASA need an enclosure for anything over 80 mm
  • Even PLA can warp on a 200 mm print if the printer sits under an air conditioner vent
  • Don't open windows mid-print

Fix 4: temperature

  • Bed too cold: filament does not stick well
  • First layer too fast: not enough time to bond
  • Layer fan too high on layer 2 for ABS: drop to zero for first 30 layers

Material warping ranked

Material Warping
PLA Low
PETG Low to medium
TPU Low
ASA Medium
ABS High
Nylon High
PC High

Browse the range

PLA warps least; PETG is the easy intermediate; ASA over ABS for outdoor durability.

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