5

I can't seem to find any reliable answer to this question. My understanding was always that PETG should be solvent-resistant, including to acetone, but parts printed from the various "PETG" filaments I have range from utterly falling apart (layer delaminations, outright ripping under tension) to deformation and smoothing of corners when soaked in acetone. Parts printed in actual PET are unaffected, as expected.

Is this an expected consequence of the modification to PET that produces PETG, or is it a sign that lots of filament vendors are deceptive and shipping some weird garbage and calling it "PETG"?

2 Answers2

2

I have tried to use PETG grid to hold my ABS models above the acetone for vapor smoothing. Specifically, I have used Prusament PETG in the Prusa Orange colors.

After a few hours acetone turned orange, and grid turned soft and gooey. Can't tell if all PETG will be affected, but this one sure is.

Element below was flat and stiff. Photo of the crate

Mołot
  • 904
  • 5
  • 18
0

To my understanding all PETG is vulnerable to different solvents to a certain degree. Despite PET being resistant to acids of many kinds, hence why it is used in plastic bottles and plastic-ware, this does not transfer over.

Nearly all filaments are incapable of handling the stronger kinds of acids, and although I cannot speak for the manufacturers on Amazon, poor quality will inexorably aggravate the thermoplastic more-so.

If it's any consolation, most/any filaments available are not remarkably chemically stable, least of all against organic solvents.

Ray Butterworth
  • 218
  • 1
  • 2
  • 5