Have about 30% remaining.Pros: Great PLA+, made plenty of parts for my Aarma Typhon. Held up during some wild times. It prints well with .16 to .28 slicing with fast print settings, printed at 219c and bed at 65c.Cons: About halfway through the spool, just small hobbyist prints, the filament will snap just after the spool when sitting for a day. Not the worst of problems, just have to refeed it but lost about 16in each time.This is my 2nd purchase of the modified PLA plus filament from yousu. It works really well and the company happened to ask me how well it worked, which I always appreciate, not just for their enthusiasm but it tends to mean the company is going for consistency of quality, hence purchasing a second which I was also satisfied with. Ill be purchasing a lot of filament from Yousu in the future, if not for the filament alone then because of the added bonus of a free nozzle with the roll. Imagine if every company did this.. This is a trend that should start. The 1st purchase also came with a free nozzle as did the 2nd purchased roll, so I'm assuming they all come with free nozzles. This is probably one of the coolest things a filament company could possibly do.these guys have a very good product they even send me a 0.4mm nozzle with each roll and the stuff prints great on my ender 3 pro and my ender 3 max neo i will be buying lots more from yousu and they have amazing prices i feel like im taking advantage of them this stuff is that good id rate it a 10 in every category if i could. nice job yousuThis PETG really isn't anything different from the more premium stuff (like Hatchbox) which I had used religiously before I started pinching pennies. It has a pretty nice matted finish, which complimented custom DIY speakers I'm working on. I've been working with this material a lot now since it has good strength and thermal resistance which makes it ideal for 3D printer components in a heated enclosure. Some additional notes about printing can be found below which may be useful.Note: I use Slic3r because it is free and has a high degree of customization settings.I print at 0.3mm layer height to save time for these bigger objects. Funny enough, this also helps with the stringing and over-extrusion from occurring and I have not had issues with layer strength being compromised.40mm/s is usually the sweet spot for PETG. Depending on the geometry of the object, you can try pushing it to 50 or 60mm speed, but it cause more stringing and could jam the extruder (it's happened multiple times to me).My initial temperature and speed is 255C which is the upper limits of what you should use for PETG and 20mm/s speed. This helps with adhesion for the starting layers which is most important. Then, it cools down to 240 which is the mid-range point for this plastic.I use a really nice glass heated bed at 100C with some superglue . Some people may say this is too hot, but in my experience it's been perfect and there have never been any downsides or warping. Adhesion is great and it really helps when printing big objects over a large surface that have minor differences in levels. With lower temperatures the plastic over time will pull up on the object as it solidifies and can pull the edges off. This helps with that.Retraction settings are typically the most important for PETG. Every printer has a different sweet spot. I'm using a direct drive BMG extruder clone, and I use a retraction length of 3mm to reduce stringing. Anything beyond this causes jams periodically, and anything below this can increase the stringing factor. 30mm/s speed seems to work well with this length in my setup. If you go to fast, you can have similar issues as mentioned. Using a z-lift after each layer height slightly increases the print time, but also helps reduce stringing. If you have a fast travel speed higher than the print speed, like 100mm/s, then you will not run into issues with the filament melting in the hot end while retracted. Slic3r in particular, has a setting to prevent retraction if the distance from one point to another is too short and this can help with prevent blobbing in detailed objects where many small extrusion points occur within a dense space.I uploaded a screenshot of these settings if you would like a reference.Your fan cooler should be set. Everyone's cooling setup is different, but I have good luck with around 45%.These settings generally work with other filaments like PLA, and ABS as well. Just tune the temperatures differently.hello, so I bought this item because I figured if I can buy in bulk it'll work so much better and I won't have an issue with the printing or with running out of material. for the first bit of time everything was great, the first week the filament printed amazingly- the printing and layer adhesion was perfect, low stringing, low worry, quick, and melted nicely. THEN the next week or let me phrase it- after the first KG of the material it was all downhill, the material didn't melt consistently anymore, it started to turn to a drip when it got hot, 205 and it didn't move at all, within 3 weeks I burned through a hotend because the filament clogged the hotend and the nozzle, so I decided to upgrade to an all metal hotend where it worked for 2 days, then clogged the entire printer, I then bought a cleaning kit and cleaned it while cold and hot, it was a goopy mess to clean, from there it was clean for 2 days and in the process of using the material it completely destroyed my ender 3 s1's extruder gears, the entire extruder was so clogged after use, I couldn't get filament in and out unless it was printing at 260 C, which from there I had to shove a metal probe through just to get a drip out of the nozzle. From there I decided to buy a brand new ALL METAL reality upgraded extruder (the same one that comes on the S1 pro). the extruder worked great then I put the filament in and it started stripping my gears as the filament seems to be very thin and it is very brittle where in some cases the filament snapped because of the extruder movement, overall this filament is to be avoided unless some quality sampling is done on the product to rule out brittleness and the inconsistency with the printing tempTLDR- filament broke extruder from lack of melting- doesn't extruder properly- melts then drips out.My setup is a stock ender 3 S1 with the pro extruder from the S1 pro-printing at 70-bed temp- and 205 nozzle tempColor being an off red, like a reddish orange then a red, other then that product is strong.Prints perfect but my only issue is when I received the product when I open packaged looked it it had been completely unspooled and respooled incorrectly and not uniformlyThe order arrived very quickly and packed with extra bonus items, the new nozzle , hot-bed and needle for clear the nozzle, the printing was very smooth. I bought this PETG with black PLA, both of filament were used to print the cat for kids.I thought i purchased a silver PLA, ends up a dull shine-less grey steel colour.Not sure if the wrong one was sent, or this one is just a bad description, no idea but if you're looking for a good silver, i recommend amazon basics PLA Silk silver, that's more like it.Brittle, repeat clogging ?I recently purchased this filament and tried to print with it, only to be horrified at what came out. At first I thought that my printer was clogged or damaged, but no, this filament is just that bad. Even at 220 degrees it still barely flows out of the nozzle. After trying to use this for a single print I simply couldn't do it and gave up. Absolutely do not buy, this filament will drive you mad. The white cube in my image is this filament and the gold is another brand, no other changes other than the filament between them. Terrible.Update: going to have to take some of the good things I said back. I've had this thing in the dehydrator for over 48 hours and it's still bubbling and clogging up the nozzle constantly, that said, I will buy this product again and just dehydrate it for a few days longer.This spool is pretty good value for the dollar/kg standpoint. I was pretty irritated that as soon as it came out of the bag it shipped in the entire spool came apart and I had to super glue it back together before doing anything with it. Thankfully the glue has been holding solid.There are some issues with the filament quality wise, but honestly, they're fairly minor if you're preparing the filament properly. I'll likely be buying another couple of spools to complete my larger prints without having to rely on the crappy filament runout sensor provided with the Ender 5+.The one thing I have to mention, this is likely the single most important thing with this and any filament... Put it in a dehydrator before using it. Don't even bother using it right out of the bag. I had mine in a food dehydrator for probably a total of 24 hours and this helped massively with the print quality. I'm using it right now as I write this to make a fan duct for the ender 5+ at 0.12mm layer height and it seems to be fairly decent now that the printer itself is tuned in.It's not perfect, but it's good for the $$.