Best 3D Printer Filament for Outdoor Prints in Australia
The Australian sun and a hot car dashboard are unforgiving for most 3D printed parts. PLA prints look great in week one and droop in week six. Pick the material based on where the part actually lives.
ASA: the outdoor default
ASA was designed for outdoor signage and automotive trim. It resists UV degradation far better than ABS or PLA, holds its colour for years and copes with sustained heat. It needs an enclosure to print reliably and warps if cooled too fast.
PETG: fine for shaded outdoor
PETG handles rain and modest UV. Direct sun for years will eventually fade and brittle some PETG colours, but for under-eaves, sheds, garages and seasonal items it works well and is much easier to print than ASA.
PC: high heat, hard to print
Polycarbonate handles the highest temps of any common FDM material (over 110 C without softening) and is genuinely tough. The trade-off is print difficulty: 270 C+ nozzle, enclosed chamber and an annealed bed surface. Worth it for specific functional parts, overkill for decorative.
PLA: not outdoors
PLA softens at around 55 C, which is below the temperature inside a parked Australian car. For anything in sunlight or a hot enclosed space, PLA will fail. Use it for prototypes, miniatures and indoor decorative pieces.
ABS: workable but harder
ABS handles heat well and is mechanically tough, but it is more UV-sensitive than ASA and needs an enclosure to avoid warping and cracking. ASA is the better outdoor choice unless you have a specific reason to use ABS.
Composite versions for functional outdoor parts
ASA CF and PA-CF (carbon-fibre nylon) are the engineering picks for outdoor brackets, drone parts, antenna mounts and similar high-stress jobs. They need a hardened nozzle.