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Can confirm. Per I have been making sure to keep my filament dry and my prints have improved noticeably.

Archive:

From the post:

>It’s possible to improve your 3D prints in all kinds of ways. You can tune your printer’s motion, buy better filament, or tinker endlessly with any number of slicer settings. Or, as [Dirt-E-Bikes] explains, you could grab yourself some silica gel. If you’re unfamiliar with silica gel, it’s that stuff that comes in the “DO NOT EAT” packet when you buy a new pair of shoes. It’s key feature is that it’s hygroscopic—which means it likes to suck up moisture from the atmosphere. When it comes to 3D printing, this is a highly useful property—specifically because it can help keep filament dry. Over time, plastic filament tends to pick up some moisture on its own from the atmosphere, and this tends to interfere with print quality. This can be avoided by storing filament in a sealed or semi-seaeled environment with silica gel. The gel will tend to suck up most of the moisture from the air in the sealed container, helping to keep the filament drier.

Can confirm. Per @MyFadedGlory I have been making sure to keep my filament dry and my prints have improved noticeably. Archive: From the post: >>It’s possible to improve your 3D prints in all kinds of ways. You can tune your printer’s motion, buy better filament, or tinker endlessly with any number of slicer settings. Or, as [Dirt-E-Bikes] explains, you could grab yourself some silica gel. If you’re unfamiliar with silica gel, it’s that stuff that comes in the “DO NOT EAT” packet when you buy a new pair of shoes. It’s key feature is that it’s hygroscopic—which means it likes to suck up moisture from the atmosphere. When it comes to 3D printing, this is a highly useful property—specifically because it can help keep filament dry. Over time, plastic filament tends to pick up some moisture on its own from the atmosphere, and this tends to interfere with print quality. This can be avoided by storing filament in a sealed or semi-seaeled environment with silica gel. The gel will tend to suck up most of the moisture from the air in the sealed container, helping to keep the filament drier.
[–] 1 pt

Did I tell you about the filament dryer I bought? Got it on Amazon pretty cheap and it dries 4 rolls at a time. Pretty cool. Sunlu

I do still keep my filament vacuum packed with silica though so I don't have to use the dryer very often.

[–] 1 pt

I think you did but I got a smaller one that I can mod to work with Home Assistant (my self hosted smart-home stuff). I have not had time to mod it yet since I have been working on other projects but I did already keep my filament vacuum packed but I was not using a dryer before/during printing. Now that I am I noticed a clear difference in my print quality.

I always looked at it as a "well that would be nice" and didn't think it would make such a big difference but now that I am doing it I wish I was doing it sooner. It is very noticeable and anyone here should get a dryer if they don't have one. It's a small investment for a major change in print quality.