You hear popping from the nozzle. The extruded filament has tiny bubbles. Your print surface looks like a teenager’s acne — random zits, stringing that defies retraction settings, and layer adhesion so weak you can snap the part with your fingers. That’s wet filament, and it’s the most common print quality issue that slicer settings can’t fix.
Moisture attacks filament at the molecular level. Nylon absorbs so much water that it becomes unprintable after 24 hours of open-air exposure. PLA takes weeks to show symptoms but the degradation is progressive and invisible until the print fails. Here’s the science, the drying protocol, and the storage system that keeps every spool ready to print.
How Moisture Damages Filament
Most 3D printing thermoplastics are hygroscopic — they absorb water molecules from ambient air. The mechanism differs by material:
- PLA: Absorbs moisture slowly (roughly 0.3% by weight after 48 hours at 50% RH). The absorbed water hydrolyzes the polymer chains during extrusion — the 200°C nozzle temperature converts water to steam, which ruptures the melt flow and creates surface defects.
- PETG: More hygroscopic than PLA (absorbs roughly 0.8% by weight at 50% RH). The moisture creates both surface defects and reduced inter-layer adhesion because steam bubbles at the layer boundary prevent proper fusion.
- TPU: Extremely hygroscopic. Absorbs 1-2% moisture within hours of exposure. Moist TPU prints with a sizzling sound, stringing that cannot be tuned out, and a rough matte surface that should be glossy.
- Nylon (PA6, PA12): The worst offender. Absorbs 3-8% moisture by weight at 50% RH. Wet Nylon hisses and pops like frying bacon during extrusion. The steam creates a foam-like extrusion that reduces part strength by 40-60%.
- ABS/ASA: Less hygroscopic than PLA (roughly 0.2% absorption) but still benefits from drying, primarily for inter-layer adhesion rather than surface quality.
- PVA (support material): Absorbs moisture faster than anything else in your workshop. Store in a sealed container with desiccant at all times — unsealed PVA becomes unprintable in under 12 hours.
Signs of Wet Filament by Print Defect
| Defect | Most Likely Cause | Affected Materials | Slicer Settings Affected |
|---|---|---|---|
| Popping/sizzling sound during extrusion | Water boiling in nozzle | Nylon, TPU, PETG | None — mechanical issue, not slicer |
| Surface zits and blobs at random locations | Steam bubbles disrupting extrusion | All | Retraction, coasting (won’t fix it) |
| Excessive stringing beyond retraction tuning | Moisture reducing melt viscosity | PETG, TPU, Nylon | Retraction distance, travel speed (marginally helpful) |
| Weak layer adhesion (snaps between layers) | Steam preventing layer fusion | Nylon, PETG, PC | Extrusion temperature, fan speed (won’t fix it) |
| Matte/rough surface on normally glossy material | Micro-bubbles on surface | PETG, TPU, ABS | Flow rate (won’t fix it) |
| Brittle filament that snaps when bent | Hydrolysis degrading polymer chains | PLA (aged), PETG | None — filament is chemically degraded |
The critical point: none of these defects are fixable in the slicer. You can chase retraction, temperature, and flow rate for weeks and never solve a moisture problem — because the defect is happening inside the nozzle, not in the toolpath.
Drying Temperatures by Material
Drying filament requires heat and time. A food dehydrator, dedicated filament dryer, or convection oven (with PID temperature control — standard ovens overshoot and melt spools) all work.
| Material | Drying Temperature | Minimum Time | Maximum Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLA | 45-50°C | 4 hours | 12 hours | Do not exceed 55°C — spool softens and filament fuses |
| PLA+ / Tough PLA | 50-55°C | 4 hours | 8 hours | Slightly higher Tg allows higher drying temp |
| PETG | 60-65°C | 4 hours | 8 hours | Printed parts warp above 70°C but spool is fine |
| TPU (flexible) | 50-55°C | 4 hours | 8 hours | Softens at 60°C+ — spool can deform |
| ABS | 65-70°C | 2 hours | 6 hours | Dries faster than PETG due to lower absorption |
| ASA | 70-75°C | 2 hours | 6 hours | Higher Tg than ABS, can take 75°C |
| Nylon (PA6) | 70-80°C | 6 hours | 12 hours | Minimum 6 hours regardless of dryer type |
| Nylon (PA12) | 75-85°C | 6 hours | 12 hours | Needs high heat; most food dehydrators max at 70°C |
| Polycarbonate (PC) | 80-90°C | 4 hours | 8 hours | Requires dedicated dryer; food dehydrator insufficient |
| PVA | 45-50°C | 4 hours | 8 hours | Dry immediately before use; re-absorbs during print |
| PLA Wood/Metal Filled | 45°C | 4 hours | 8 hours | Fillers don’t change drying needs; gentle heat |
The Food Dehydrator Method
A round food dehydrator with stacked trays is the most cost-effective dryer. Remove all but one tray, cut the centers out of the remaining trays to create a tall cylinder, and stack spools vertically. Set to the target temperature and run for the minimum time.
The dehydrator’s thermometer is usually inaccurate by ±10°C. Verify with a standalone thermometer placed near the spool. I use an oven thermometer hanging from the top tray — it costs $8 and prevents melted spools.
Dedicated Filament Dryers
The Sunlu S2, Eibos Cyclopes, and PrintDry Pro are purpose-built filament dryers with PID temperature control and active air circulation. They’re accurate to ±2°C and typically reach 70°C maximum — enough for everything except polycarbonate and PA12.
The key advantage over a food dehydrator: you can print directly from a dedicated dryer. The spool sits in a heated chamber with a PTFE tube port that feeds directly to the extruder. For Nylon and TPU, printing from the dryer while it’s actively heating prevents the filament from re-absorbing moisture during a multi-hour print. A Nylon print that takes 8 hours will absorb enough ambient moisture to show quality degradation in the last 25% of the print if it’s not fed from a heated dry box.
Storage: Preventing Re-Absorption
Dried filament starts re-absorbing moisture immediately. The rate depends on ambient humidity:
- At 50% RH: Nylon re-absorbs to unprintable levels in ~24 hours. PETG in ~72 hours. PLA in ~2 weeks.
- At 30% RH: Nylon lasts ~3 days. PETG ~2 weeks. PLA ~2 months.
- At 15% RH (sealed with desiccant): All materials stable indefinitely.
Storage Solutions by Budget
| Solution | Cost | RH Maintained | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ziploc bag + silica gel packet | $0 (included with filament) | ~30% RH for 1-2 days | Short-term, occasional printing |
| Vacuum bag + desiccant + pump | $15 for 10 bags | ~15% RH for weeks | Long-term storage of opened spools |
| Airtight cereal container (4L) + 200g desiccant | $12 per container | ~15% RH indefinitely | Daily-use storage, one spool per container |
| 20L gasket-sealed tote + 500g rechargeable desiccant | $30 | ~15% RH indefinitely | Bulk storage, 8-10 spools |
| Eibos filament vacuum kit (electric pump) | $45 | <10% RH for months | Best for Nylon, PVA, PC — materials that demand low humidity |
The cereal container solution is the sweet spot for daily use. A 4-liter Rubbermaid Brilliance container fits one 1kg spool, and a 200g silica gel pack inside maintains 15% RH for 6-8 months. A small digital hygrometer ($3 on AliExpress) stuck to the inside of the lid confirms the humidity. When the silica gel indicator beads turn from orange to green, recharge the pack in the oven at 100°C for 2 hours.
Common Mistakes & What Most Users Get Wrong
1. Drying filament but not storing it properly. Drying restores the filament — storage keeps it that way. A spool dried for 6 hours and then left on the printer overnight in a 60% RH basement is back to wet by morning (for Nylon) or by next week (for PLA). Dry → store → print from storage. The chain breaks at the storage step for most beginners.
2. Overheating PLA during drying. The glass transition temperature of PLA is 55-60°C. At 60°C, the filament on the spool softens just enough for adjacent winds to stick together. You’ll hear a “tick-tick-tick” as the extruder pulls stuck winds apart, and the feed tension becomes inconsistent. Keep PLA at 50°C maximum — if your dryer’s lowest setting is 55°C and you can’t verify the actual temperature, don’t trust it.
3. Using a kitchen oven for filament drying. Standard kitchen ovens cycle ±15-20°C around the set point. When the heating element kicks on, the local temperature near the element can spike 30°C above the set point. That spike melts the outer windings of the filament before the oven’s thermostat registers the overshoot. I’ve ruined two spools this way before switching to a food dehydrator. Use an oven only if it has a convection fan and a separate PID controller.
4. Assuming new filament arrives dry. Manufacturers cool filament in a water bath after extrusion. The vacuum-sealed bag with desiccant that the spool arrives in is packaging, not a guarantee — some manufacturers seal spools while they’re still above ambient humidity. I’ve opened sealed Nylon spools that printed worse than spools I’d dried 3 days earlier. Always dry Nylon, PVA, and TPU before first use regardless of packaging.
5. Ignoring seasonal humidity changes. A PETG spool that prints perfectly in January (30% indoor RH) might string constantly in July (65% indoor RH). The filament hasn’t degraded — the ambient conditions have changed. In humid seasons, print directly from a dry box with a PTFE feed tube. Your retraction settings didn’t change; the filament’s moisture content did.
⚠️ Safety Notice: Drying filament involves sustained heat. Never leave a food dehydrator or filament dryer running unattended for extended periods. Ensure your drying setup is on a non-flammable surface away from combustible materials. Some filaments (ABS, ASA, Nylon) can off-gas small amounts of volatile compounds during drying — provide ventilation or run the dryer in a well-ventilated area. Do not use a kitchen oven that’s also used for food preparation for drying engineering filaments — residue from ABS or Nylon can contaminate cooking surfaces. Verify your dryer’s thermal cutoff functions correctly before extended unattended operation. In 2026, use only drying equipment with over-temperature protection (thermal fuse or software cutoff).
For the slicer-side settings that complement dry filament, our 3D Printer Stringing Solutions Guide covers the retraction tuning that dry filament enables. Our TPU Printing Guide has the storage and drying workflow specific to flexible materials. And our PLA vs PETG comparison explains how moisture sensitivity influences material selection for different applications.
Printing exotic materials like Nylon and TPU demands filament that’s dry before it enters the extruder. The Sunlu S2 filament dryer’s active PTC heating element holds 50-70°C with ±2°C accuracy, and the built-in fan circulates air through the spool instead of just heating the box. The PTFE tube output port lets you print directly from the dryer — essential for Nylon parts that take 8+ hours and would re-absorb moisture mid-print from an unheated spool holder.
