I've previously ALGA filament from Algix, which incorporated some organic algae matter
into the filament.
However, that's the only filament from Algix that does that, thankfully, so today's APLA
or advanced PLA is just a regular PLA blend.
Again, working off of the tiny 100g sample, I didn't have much material to spare, but
since printability was much better, I actually got a full data set and, look at that, a hero
print out of it.
The filament retails at about 50€ per kilogram, which is quite expensive.
However, as an advanced PLA, I'm gesturing air quotes here, Algix claims better adhesion,
strength, stiffness, higher heat deflection temperatures, yet lower warping, which seems
contradictory, so we'll put that to the test.
Recommended print temperatures are between 195 and 210°C, which is perfectly normal
for PLA, and my test prints at 190, 200 and 210°C, shown from left to right here, all
turned out fine, so I went with the highest temperature to possibly improve strength.
Visually, this Majestic Gold color looks more like a brown-ish brass, but it does have a
very deep metallic effect, which I think looks very nice.
It doesn't show up on vertical surfaces much, they just end up with a darker, dull
finish, but top and bottom surfaces get a really nice depth to them.
These samples were all printed during the same print and with the same settings, the
only thing that changed was the direction they were oriented.
Quality is fine otherwise as well, the slight drooping and stringing we're seeing can
still be tuned out probably even with just a slightly lower print temperature.
Mechanically, it's kind of interesting.
There seem to be two different popular types of PLA, one is more of a ductile, tough, almost
ABS-like type, the other is harsh, brittle and likes to crack and APLA is definitely
part of the latter group.
Tensile strength and impact resistance are good, but there are other PLAs that are better.
Now, for the claim of improved thermal resistance, well, there are about four different behaviours
I've seen with the boiling water test ranging from PLA becoming chewing-gum like to polycarbonate
not caring at all.
With APLA, I honestly couldn't tell a difference to any other PLA, so while there might be
a marginal measurable difference, it certainly does not make a difference in the real world.
In conclusion, Algix APLA is certainly a great filament.
I like the metallic color, but if that's not factor for you, there are other PLAs out
there that give you a much bigger bang for your buck.
Keep in mind that value does not factor into the final rating, so with that ignored, APLA
gets ranked in the top tier of filaments.
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