Print ABS and ASA on Bambu Lab Without Warping: Settings, Enclosure, Ventilation
Use this ABS/ASA guide for Bambu Lab X1C, P1S, and P2S printers: enclosure, bed adhesion, chamber heat, ventilation, and functional-part settings.
How to Print ABS and ASA on Bambu Lab Printers
ABS and ASA are the go-to materials for functional parts that need heat resistance, UV stability, and real mechanical strength. But they’re the materials most people fail at — warping, layer splitting, and the infamous fumes.
I print ABS and ASA weekly on my X1C and P1S. Here’s how to do it without the drama.
ABS vs ASA: Which One?
ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene):
- The classic engineering filament
- Heat resistant to ~100°C
- Strong, machinable, sandable, acetone-smoothable
- Warps aggressively without enclosure
- Produces styrene fumes (ventilation recommended)
- Cheaper: $15-20/kg
ASA (Acrylonitrile Styrene Acrylate):
- ABS’s outdoor cousin
- UV resistant — won’t yellow or degrade in sunlight
- Same heat resistance (~100°C)
- Less warping than ABS (but still needs enclosure)
- Same fumes concern
- Slightly more expensive: $18-25/kg
Bottom line: Use ASA for anything going outdoors. Use ABS for everything else. Their print settings are nearly identical.
Recommended brands:
- Bambu Lab ABS — pre-tuned profiles, reliable
- eSUN ABS+ — less warping than standard ABS, budget-friendly
- Polymaker ASA — excellent UV resistance, good color range
- Bambu Lab ASA — guaranteed compatibility, pre-tuned
Printer Requirements: Which Bambu Lab Printers Can Handle It?
X1C and X1E — Best for ABS/ASA ✅
- Fully enclosed with active chamber heating
- Reaches 55-60°C chamber temp
- HEPA + carbon filter included
- This is what these printers were designed for
P1S — Good for ABS/ASA ✅
- Enclosed but no active heating (ambient heat builds to 40-45°C)
- Adequate for most ABS/ASA prints
- Add-on HEPA/carbon filter available
- Upgrade: add insulation panels for better heat retention
P2S — Same as P1S ✅
- Enclosed, passive heating
- Works well for ABS/ASA with proper settings
A1 and A1 Mini — Not Recommended ❌
- Open frame = no chamber heat
- ABS will warp badly on anything larger than 40mm
- Small ABS parts might work with a DIY enclosure, but it’s fighting the design
- Use PETG instead on these printers
Print Settings
Temperature
ABS:
- Nozzle: 250-260°C (Bambu ABS profile: 255°C)
- Bed: 100-110°C (105°C works well)
- Chamber: 50-60°C (X1C with heating), 40-45°C (P1S passive)
ASA:
- Nozzle: 250-265°C (slightly higher than ABS)
- Bed: 100-110°C
- Chamber: 50-60°C
Speed
ABS/ASA print well at moderate to high speeds:
- Outer wall: 80-120mm/s
- Inner wall: 120-180mm/s
- Infill: 200-250mm/s
- First layer: 30-50mm/s (slower for adhesion)
Don’t go Ludicrous mode — the thermal stress from fast movements in a hot chamber can cause layer splitting.
Cooling
This is critical and counterintuitive:
- Part cooling fan: LOW. 20-40% for most of the print. ABS/ASA need to stay warm for layer adhesion.
- First layer fan: 0%. Zero. Not negotiable.
- Bridges and overhangs: 60-80%. Brief burst of cooling for structural support.
- Auxiliary fan (X1C): OFF during ABS/ASA printing. You want the chamber hot.
Too much cooling = layer splitting, warping, and delamination. The #1 mistake people make with ABS is cooling it like PLA.
Bed Adhesion
ABS sticks to:
- Smooth PEI: Good adhesion at 105°C+
- Textured PEI with glue stick: Best combination. Glue helps adhesion and release.
- Garolite (G10): Excellent for ABS. Bonds when hot, releases when cool.
Always use a brim with ABS. 5-8mm outer brim prevents corner lifting on 95% of parts. It’s faster than reprinting a warped part.
Glue stick application: Thin, even layer on a cold plate. Elmer’s Purple Glue Stick — cheap and effective.
Enclosure Management
X1C with active heating:
- Set chamber target to 55°C (Bambu Studio > Printer Settings > Chamber Temperature)
- Close the door and top lid
- Don’t open during printing — temperature drops cause warping
- Pre-heat the chamber for 10-15 minutes before starting
P1S without active heating:
- Close the enclosure completely
- Print a dummy object first to build chamber heat
- Or: run the bed at 110°C for 10 minutes before starting
- Add insulation panels to the top and sides for better heat retention
Ventilation and Fumes
ABS and ASA produce styrene fumes. They’re not acutely dangerous in a ventilated room, but long-term exposure is a concern. Handle this:
Best Solution: HEPA + Carbon Filter (X1C Built-In)
The X1C comes with a HEPA filter and activated carbon filter that handles most fumes. Replace the carbon filter every 3-6 months if you print ABS regularly.
For P1S/P2S: Add-On Filter
The Bambu Lab HEPA Filter Kit fits the P1S/P2S and provides similar filtration.
Budget Solution: Vent to Window
Run a dryer vent hose from the enclosure exhaust to a window. Not elegant but effective.
Minimum: Run in a Ventilated Room
Don’t print ABS in a sealed bedroom. Open a window or run the printer in a garage/workshop.
Common ABS/ASA Problems
Warping (Corners Lifting)
Cause: Temperature differential between bottom and top of print Fix:
- Increase bed temp to 110°C
- Increase chamber temp (close enclosure, don’t open during print)
- Add 8mm brim
- Glue stick on build plate
- Reduce infill (less internal stress)
- Slow first layer to 30mm/s
- Don’t print near the door seal (cooler area)
Layer Splitting / Delamination
Cause: Too much cooling, or chamber not warm enough Fix:
- Reduce part cooling fan to 20% or less
- Increase nozzle temperature by 5°C
- Close enclosure completely — no gaps
- Check for drafts (door seal, gaps in lid)
Elephant’s Foot (First Layer Too Wide)
Cause: Bed too hot + nozzle too close Fix:
- Raise Z offset slightly (+0.02mm)
- Reduce bed temp by 5°C for first layer only
- Enable elephant’s foot compensation in Bambu Studio (Print Settings > Quality)
Stringing
Cause: ABS doesn’t string as much as PETG, but can at high temps Fix:
- Drop nozzle temp by 5°C
- Standard retraction (0.8mm at 30mm/s)
- Z hop enabled
Surface Bubbles / Rough Texture
Cause: Wet filament Fix: Dry your ABS at 80°C for 4-6 hours. ABS absorbs moisture, and wet ABS produces a rough, bubbly surface. Use a filament dryer.
Acetone Smoothing (ABS Only)
ABS dissolves in acetone, which means you can smooth layer lines to a near-injection-molded finish:
- Get pure acetone
- Pour a small amount into a glass container (NOT plastic)
- Place your ABS part on a raised platform inside the container
- Cover loosely (not airtight)
- Wait 30-60 minutes — acetone vapor smooths the surface
- Remove and let it cure for 24 hours
Warning: Acetone is highly flammable. Do this in a ventilated area away from heat sources. Wear gloves.
Note: ASA does NOT smooth with acetone. If you need post-processing, use ABS.
My ABS/ASA Production Settings
For functional drone parts on the X1C:
- Material: eSUN ABS+ (black)
- Nozzle: 255°C
- Bed: 105°C on textured PEI + glue stick
- Chamber: 55°C (active heating)
- Speed: Standard profile (100mm/s outer wall)
- Fan: 25% part cooling, 0% first layer
- Walls: 3 (functional strength)
- Infill: 25% grid
- Brim: 6mm, outer only
- Retraction: 0.8mm at 30mm/s
These settings give me consistent, warp-free parts across multiple prints. ABS+ specifically (eSUN brand) warps less than standard ABS — worth the slightly higher price.
More material guides: PETG Guide, TPU Guide, Best Filament for Bambu Lab. Need the full enclosure deep-dive? Read our Enclosure Guide.