Filament Storage and Drying: A Practical Guide

Filament Storage and Drying: A Practical Guide

Why moisture matters

Water trapped in filament flashes to steam at the nozzle. You will hear it pop, see steam, and the resulting print has reduced layer adhesion, stringing and a dull surface. Nylon and TPU show this fastest; PLA and PETG show it after weeks of exposure.

Which materials need drying most

Material Moisture sensitivity
Nylon Extreme. Dry every time.
TPU High. Dry weekly during use.
PETG Medium. Dry if it has been open a month.
ABS / ASA Medium.
PLA Low to medium. Still affected after months open.

Signs of wet filament

  • Popping or cracking sounds at the nozzle
  • Visible steam at the hotend
  • Stringing that was not there with the same spool fresh
  • Dull, rough surface finish
  • Brittle prints that snap at layer lines

Storage between prints

  • Original bag plus silica gel, resealed (fine for weeks)
  • Sealed dry box with bulk silica (fine for months)
  • Active dehumidifier dry box for long-term archival
  • Avoid leaving spools on the printer for days in a humid room

Drying methods

  • Filament dryer: cleanest option, controllable, prints from the dryer
  • Food dehydrator: works, often cheaper
  • Oven: set 60 to 70 C for PLA, 70 to 80 C for PETG, 80 to 90 C for nylon and TPU. Check with an oven thermometer; many ovens overshoot
  • Microwave: do not use this

Dry times to start with

Material Temp Time
PLA 45 to 55 C 4 to 6 hours
PETG 65 C 4 to 6 hours
ABS / ASA 75 C 4 to 6 hours
TPU 50 C 6 to 8 hours
Nylon 80 C 8 to 12 hours

What we ship with

Every Siddament spool ships with silica gel inside a resealable bag. That bag is the simplest dry-box you have. Keep it.

Browse the range

Nylon, TPU, PETG.

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