
Polymaker
15.1K posts

Polymaker
@Polymaker_3D
Bringing the fun to #3DPrinting with premium filaments for every printer! 🔗 https://t.co/lv9hQFHyB4 👾 https://t.co/MKnnyp3qcq




Had to expand my filament storage - this is now the ASA Annex - clearing the larger shelf for 64 PLA colors. This is all my ASA, plus the top row is just what’s loaded into the AMSs currently. I only buy @Polymaker_3D ASA, plus orange/black @prusament ASA for Prusa things.




Saturday evening, we are reaching our lifetime goal of $12K for @StJudePLAYLIVE with milestone giveaways from @Polymaker_3D @West3DPrinting @Proto_pasta @cookiecad @PolarFilament and perhaps more! Layers of Hope for the families who need @StJude globally! THANK YOU!


Tonight we’re doing Rainbow Doom Speed Trials 🚀 My AWD 48V Voron is tuned, so now it’s time to see what it can actually do. Chat chooses the challenge: Fastest usable print? Best quality under 30 minutes? Functional part speedrun? Cursed Benchy gauntlet? You pick! Live tonight on Twitch, 10PM EST





So, is this the part where my 3D printing chapter starts to close? For anyone new here, my name is Austin, aka ZombieHedgehog. I’ve been printing nearly nonstop for over 4 years across everything from off-the-shelf machines to completely custom builds. I livestream multiple times a week on Twitch, post content on YouTube, and spend a probably unreasonable amount of time thinking about how to make printers, prints, and the overall 3D printing experience better. During the day, I work full time as an Electrical Engineer designing critical electrical substations. That means working on failed equipment replacements, expansions, and completely new sites to help keep up with the growing demand on the electrical grid. It’s technical, high-responsibility work, and it has definitely shaped the way I look at machines, systems, reliability, and problem solving. In 3D printing, my focus has always been bigger than just showing off prints. I do printer unboxings and first impressions because after using so many machines, I’ve developed a pretty sharp eye for spotting potential problems, smart design choices, and the little things that can make or break the user experience right out of the box. Custom printer builds are where my 3D printing journey really started. I began by designing my own parts to build the best machine I could with the limited budget I had at the time. Over the years that turned into everything from mostly 3D printed machines to fast CoreXY builds, experimental beta machines, and multiple heavily involved toolchangers. Some of those printers were even built specifically to bring to RepRap events to help inspire the next generation of builders. Printer mods are another major part of what I do. Whether it’s a custom build or an off-the-shelf machine, I’m always looking for ways to improve workflow, reliability, quality, performance, and of course make the printer look as cool as possible while doing it. Then there are the actual 3D printed projects. Over the years I’ve built RC cars, detailed display pieces, functional dart blasters, organizer systems, working instruments, trains, props, multicolor models, and plenty of strange ideas that somehow became real. I try to keep the projects diverse because 3D printing is so much more than one category of objects, and I want to show as many sides of it as I can. Filament is a huge part of that too. I honestly can’t count how many spools I’ve gone through at this point, but based on how consistently I print, it is probably over 500 spools and counting. Polymaker has been a huge supporter of the channel from early on, but I made sure my First Partner agreement stayed non-exclusive so I can continue testing filaments and equipment from other brands fairly. I care about printability, but I also care a lot about color choice, material choice, and planning prints in depth so the final result actually matches the idea I had in my head. Printer tuning has also been a constant obsession since my earliest machines. I love trying to find the best balance between quality, speed, strength, and reliability. I’ve created a lot of tuned profiles over the years and published some on Patreon for convenience, but I’ll always explain my methodology and thought process live on stream when people ask. To me, the goal is not just printing faster. The goal is making every print successful, intentional, and worth the time and material that went into it. All of this comes back to the same main goal: making 3D printing a better experience. I’m not doing this just to chase the most money possible. I’m doing it because I genuinely believe good content, honest testing, clear explanations, and shared resources can help people. I’m not perfect, and I never will be, but after years of printing, building, failing, fixing, and sharing, I know I can make an impact, even if it only helps a small percentage of people get better results or feel more confident trying something new. So is this a long explanation of why I’m stepping away from 3D printing? Of course not. It’s the opposite. This is me taking the next big step toward the educational content I’ve been planning for years. Over the next few months, I’ll be gathering suggestions, building resources, and continuing the larger Hedgehog Makes: The Future initiative I started last year to help push 3D printing forward. Thank you all for watching the content, hanging out during livestreams, engaging on social media, supporting the channel, and helping shape what this has become. And this is just the beginning😎



So, is this the part where my 3D printing chapter starts to close? For anyone new here, my name is Austin, aka ZombieHedgehog. I’ve been printing nearly nonstop for over 4 years across everything from off-the-shelf machines to completely custom builds. I livestream multiple times a week on Twitch, post content on YouTube, and spend a probably unreasonable amount of time thinking about how to make printers, prints, and the overall 3D printing experience better. During the day, I work full time as an Electrical Engineer designing critical electrical substations. That means working on failed equipment replacements, expansions, and completely new sites to help keep up with the growing demand on the electrical grid. It’s technical, high-responsibility work, and it has definitely shaped the way I look at machines, systems, reliability, and problem solving. In 3D printing, my focus has always been bigger than just showing off prints. I do printer unboxings and first impressions because after using so many machines, I’ve developed a pretty sharp eye for spotting potential problems, smart design choices, and the little things that can make or break the user experience right out of the box. Custom printer builds are where my 3D printing journey really started. I began by designing my own parts to build the best machine I could with the limited budget I had at the time. Over the years that turned into everything from mostly 3D printed machines to fast CoreXY builds, experimental beta machines, and multiple heavily involved toolchangers. Some of those printers were even built specifically to bring to RepRap events to help inspire the next generation of builders. Printer mods are another major part of what I do. Whether it’s a custom build or an off-the-shelf machine, I’m always looking for ways to improve workflow, reliability, quality, performance, and of course make the printer look as cool as possible while doing it. Then there are the actual 3D printed projects. Over the years I’ve built RC cars, detailed display pieces, functional dart blasters, organizer systems, working instruments, trains, props, multicolor models, and plenty of strange ideas that somehow became real. I try to keep the projects diverse because 3D printing is so much more than one category of objects, and I want to show as many sides of it as I can. Filament is a huge part of that too. I honestly can’t count how many spools I’ve gone through at this point, but based on how consistently I print, it is probably over 500 spools and counting. Polymaker has been a huge supporter of the channel from early on, but I made sure my First Partner agreement stayed non-exclusive so I can continue testing filaments and equipment from other brands fairly. I care about printability, but I also care a lot about color choice, material choice, and planning prints in depth so the final result actually matches the idea I had in my head. Printer tuning has also been a constant obsession since my earliest machines. I love trying to find the best balance between quality, speed, strength, and reliability. I’ve created a lot of tuned profiles over the years and published some on Patreon for convenience, but I’ll always explain my methodology and thought process live on stream when people ask. To me, the goal is not just printing faster. The goal is making every print successful, intentional, and worth the time and material that went into it. All of this comes back to the same main goal: making 3D printing a better experience. I’m not doing this just to chase the most money possible. I’m doing it because I genuinely believe good content, honest testing, clear explanations, and shared resources can help people. I’m not perfect, and I never will be, but after years of printing, building, failing, fixing, and sharing, I know I can make an impact, even if it only helps a small percentage of people get better results or feel more confident trying something new. So is this a long explanation of why I’m stepping away from 3D printing? Of course not. It’s the opposite. This is me taking the next big step toward the educational content I’ve been planning for years. Over the next few months, I’ll be gathering suggestions, building resources, and continuing the larger Hedgehog Makes: The Future initiative I started last year to help push 3D printing forward. Thank you all for watching the content, hanging out during livestreams, engaging on social media, supporting the channel, and helping shape what this has become. And this is just the beginning😎

To celebrate this next step, I’m running a @Polymaker_3D filament giveaway! I’m giving away 10 spools of filament to 10 different people. To enter, comment with something you’ve learned in 3D printing that has genuinely improved your printing experience. It can be a slicer setting, a maintenance habit, a material tip, a calibration lesson, a workflow change, or even one of those painful mistakes that taught you something useful. Giveaway details: - 10 winners. - 1 spool per winner. - Up to $35 USD filament value per prize. - Shipping globally where Polymaker is able to ship. - Winners must message me on X/Twitter to claim. - Winners must reply within 24 hours or another winner may be selected. - Giveaway closes on July 10 at 8PM Eastern. I want this to be more than just a giveaway, I’d love for the replies to become a thread full of real tips that help other people get better prints. Good luck, and thank you all again for being part of this!










Printed this awesome piece by UnicornGraveyard on Patreon. It’s called Drivetrain Widow. I used @Polymaker_3D Luminous Rainbow Glow! Check comments for 🔗 #affiliate









