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Overture PETG — print settings

Overture's recommended PETG settings, straight from the manufacturer. src B

Nozzle temp
230–250 °C
start ~240 °C
Bed temp
80–90 °C
start ~85 °C
Max print speed
n/p
Part cooling fan
50%
Enclosure
Not needed
Drying
If the spool is wet
These are starting points, not gospel. Filament settings shift with your printer, nozzle size, slicer and ambient temperature. Print a temperature tower on each new spool and adjust. The numbers above are Overture's own published recommendations.

Notes

Overture's guide recommends nozzle 230–250 °C (start 240 °C) and bed 80–90 °C (start 85 °C). Let the bed cool before removing the part.

Dry if stringing is excessive; store sealed.

Source: Overture PETG print settings guide src B · last verified 2026-06-10. Popular value brand; recommended settings come from Overture's own printing guides rather than a formal TDS.

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About PETG

The practical step up from PLA: tougher, more temperature- and chemical-resistant, and still printable without an enclosure. The catch is stringing and oozing — PETG likes a hotter nozzle, slower travel, and careful retraction. Mild moisture sensitivity. A common all-round choice for functional parts.

Good for
  • Functional/mechanical parts
  • Outdoor parts (better UV/weather than PLA)
  • Food-adjacent and watertight prints
  • Brackets, fixtures, enclosures
Avoid for
  • Fine detail at high speed (stringing)
  • Tight bridging without tuned cooling

More PETG brands and the full settings table: PETG settings →

FAQ

What temperature should I print Overture PETG at?

Overture recommends a nozzle temperature of 230–250 °C and a bed of 80–90 °C. A good starting point is about 240 °C nozzle / 85 °C bed; tune with a temperature tower. Source: Overture (2026-06-10).

Does Overture PETG need an enclosure?

No. Overture PETG prints fine on an open-frame printer.

Do I need to dry Overture PETG?

Dry if stringing is excessive; store sealed.

Other Overture filaments