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Best Enclosed 3D Printers for ABS and Nylon

Best Enclosed 3D Printers for ABS and Nylon

If you want to print ABS, ASA, nylon, or polycarbonate reliably, you need an enclosed 3D printer. These materials warp, crack, and delaminate when they cool unevenly — which happens immediately on any open-frame printer in a normal room. An enclosure traps heat, maintains a stable ambient temperature, and shields the print from drafts. It is the single most important feature for engineering materials.

Not all enclosures are created equal. A thin fabric cover is not the same as a rigid, sealed chamber with active heating. This guide ranks the best enclosed printers by their actual ability to print demanding materials, from passive enclosures to actively heated chambers.

What Makes a Good Enclosure

Passive Enclosure

The printer has walls, a top, and usually a door. Heat from the heated bed gradually warms the chamber to 35-50°C. This is sufficient for ABS and ASA in most cases.

Examples: Bambu Lab P1S, Creality K1C

Active Chamber Heating

A dedicated heater raises the chamber temperature to 55-70°C or higher, independent of the bed temperature. This is necessary for nylon, polycarbonate, and some filled materials that need consistent high ambient temperatures.

Examples: Qidi X-Plus 3, Voron 2.4 (with aftermarket chamber heater)

Why Chamber Temperature Matters

MaterialMinimum Chamber TempRecommended
PLANot needed (too hot is bad)Room temp
PETGNot neededRoom temp - 35°C
ABS35°C minimum40-50°C
ASA35°C minimum40-50°C
PA (Nylon)45°C minimum50-65°C
PC (Polycarbonate)50°C minimum60-70°C
PEEK/PEI90°C+120-150°C (industrial only)

Our Top Picks

1. Bambu Lab P1S — Best Enclosed Printer Overall

Price: ~$450 | Check on Amazon

The P1S is the most popular enclosed printer in the consumer market, and deservedly so.

Enclosure specs:

  • Rigid plastic panels on all sides
  • Removable magnetic front door (glass)
  • Activated carbon filter for fume reduction
  • Passive heating from bed — chamber reaches 40-50°C with bed at 100°C
  • HEPA-compatible air filtration option

Material compatibility:

  • PLA: Yes (open door to prevent heat creep)
  • PETG: Yes
  • ABS: Yes (reliable with door closed)
  • ASA: Yes
  • TPU: Yes
  • PA (Nylon): Yes, with pre-dried filament
  • PC: Possible but at the limit — chamber temp may not be high enough for large PC parts

Why it is the top pick:

  • Most users who buy the P1S for ABS printing find it works reliably without modification
  • The enclosure is well-sealed and reaches adequate temperature for ABS/ASA
  • CoreXY design, 300°C hotend, direct drive — the hardware supports the materials
  • Automatic calibration (LiDAR, flow, vibration) reduces material-specific tuning time

Limitation: Passive heating only. No active chamber heater means 50°C is the practical maximum. For nylon and PC, you may need to supplement with a chamber preheating strategy (run a heated bed at max for 15 minutes before printing).

According to All3DP, the P1S handles ABS "nearly as well as printers twice its price."

2. Qidi X-Plus 3 — Best Active Chamber Heating

Price: ~$480 | Check on Amazon

The Qidi X-Plus 3 is the best option under $500 for users who need to print nylon and polycarbonate regularly.

Enclosure specs:

  • Fully sealed rigid enclosure
  • Active chamber heater — reaches 60°C+ chamber temperature
  • HEPA + activated carbon filtration
  • Insulated panels for heat retention
  • Triple-sealed door

Material compatibility:

  • PLA: Yes (open door, chamber heater off)
  • PETG: Yes
  • ABS: Excellent (active heating ensures perfect conditions)
  • ASA: Excellent
  • PA (Nylon): Very good — the active chamber heater provides the 50-60°C nylon needs
  • PC: Good — 60°C chamber is within PC's requirements for most prints
  • CF-filled materials: Yes, with the optional hardened nozzle

Why it is great:

  • The active chamber heater is a game-changer for engineering materials
  • 350°C hotend handles the highest-temperature filaments
  • 305x305x305mm build volume — among the largest enclosed printers at this price
  • Klipper firmware for speed and customization

Limitations:

  • Larger physical footprint than the P1S
  • Smaller community than Bambu Lab
  • Qidi Slicer is adequate but not as polished as BambuStudio or OrcaSlicer

As 3D Printing Industry's review notes, the active chamber heating makes the X-Plus 3 "the best option for engineering filaments under $500."

3. Creality K1C — Best Budget Enclosed Printer

Price: ~$400 | Check on Amazon

The K1C brings enclosed CoreXY printing under $400 with a hardened steel nozzle included.

Enclosure specs:

  • Rigid panels with clear door
  • Passive heating — reaches 35-45°C
  • Carbon filter for ABS fumes
  • 220x220x250mm build volume

Material compatibility:

  • PLA/PETG: Yes
  • ABS: Yes (with door closed, adequate for most prints)
  • ASA: Yes
  • TPU: Yes
  • PA: Marginal (chamber temp may be too low for large nylon parts)

Why it is great:

  • Hardened steel nozzle stock — ready for carbon fiber filaments
  • CoreXY speed at a competitive price
  • Klipper firmware with customization options
  • Cheapest fully enclosed CoreXY option

Limitations:

  • Enclosure is less sealed than the P1S (some air gaps)
  • Passive heating only — chamber temperature is lower than the P1S
  • Smaller build volume

4. Bambu Lab X1 Carbon — Best Premium Enclosed Printer

Price: ~$1,150 | Check on Amazon

The X1C is Bambu Lab's flagship, with everything the P1S has plus a hardened steel nozzle, a more rigid frame, and slightly better chamber temperature management.

Enclosure specs:

  • Same P1S enclosure design but with better sealing
  • Activated carbon + HEPA filtration
  • Passive heating reaching 45-55°C
  • Built-in chamber temperature sensor

Material compatibility: Everything the P1S handles, plus slightly better performance with nylon and PC due to the improved sealing and thermal management.

Why it is great:

  • All the P1S advantages plus premium build quality
  • Hardened steel nozzle stock
  • Best-in-class automatic calibration
  • AMS compatibility for multi-color with engineering materials

Limitation: More than double the P1S price for modest improvements. For most users, the P1S is sufficient.

5. Voron 2.4 (Self-Built) — Best DIY Enclosed Printer

Price: ~$400-700 (parts) | Kits from LDO Motors and others

The Voron 2.4 is a fully enclosed CoreXY printer designed by and for the community. With aftermarket chamber heaters, it can achieve 60-70°C chamber temperatures.

Enclosure specs:

  • Fully sealed acrylic or polycarbonate panels
  • Community chamber heater mods available (Keenovo heaters, exhaust fans)
  • Customizable to any thermal requirement
  • Foam-sealed panels for maximum heat retention

Material compatibility: Everything, including materials up to 300°C nozzle temperature. With a chamber heater mod, it handles nylon and PC excellently.

Why it is great:

  • Maximum customization — build exactly the thermal chamber you need
  • Premium CoreXY mechanics for speed and quality
  • Klipper firmware with every feature
  • Community support through the Voron Discord

Limitations:

  • 20-40 hours assembly time
  • No warranty or commercial support
  • Quality depends entirely on your build skill and component choices
  • Requires significant 3D printing knowledge

6. Prusa MK4S + Original Prusa Enclosure — Best Open-Source Enclosed

Price: $560 total ($460 printer + ~$100 enclosure) | Printer on Amazon

Prusa's official enclosure transforms the MK4S into a capable enclosed printer.

Enclosure specs:

  • Rigid polycarbonate panels with filtered ventilation
  • Passive heating — reaches 35-45°C
  • Designed specifically for the MK4S dimensions

Material compatibility:

  • PLA/PETG: Yes
  • ABS: Adequate for medium-sized parts
  • ASA: Yes
  • PA: Marginal without additional heating

Why it is great:

  • Prusa's legendary reliability inside an enclosure
  • Official, tested enclosure design — not a hack
  • Open-source — modify as needed

Limitation: The enclosure adds $100+ and the MK4S's bedslinger design is slower than CoreXY alternatives.

Enclosure Comparison Table

PrinterEnclosure TypeMax Chamber TempBuild VolumePrice
P1SPassive, rigid~50°C256³ mm$450
Qidi X-Plus 3Active heater~65°C305³ mm$480
K1CPassive, rigid~45°C220x220x250$400
X1 CarbonPassive, rigid~55°C256³ mm$1,150
Voron 2.4Custom (active possible)70°C+350³ mm (350 kit)$400-700
MK4S + EnclosurePassive, rigid~40°C250x210x220$560

DIY Enclosure Options

If your printer does not come enclosed, you can add an enclosure:

  • IKEA Lack Enclosure: Two IKEA Lack tables stacked, with acrylic panels. Costs ~$30-50. Fits Ender 3, Prusa Mini, and similar-sized printers. Search 3DSearch for "Lack enclosure" to find printable connectors and panel holders.
  • Creality Fabric Enclosure: The Creality Enclosure is a zip-up fabric tent that provides basic draft protection. Adequate for ABS on small-to-medium prints.
  • Custom acrylic/polycarbonate enclosure: Cut panels to size and join with 3D printed brackets. Best thermal performance of the DIY options.

According to Thomas Sanladerer's enclosure guide, even a basic enclosure raises ambient temperature by 15-20°C, which is often enough for ABS.

Tips for Printing in an Enclosure

  1. Open the door for PLA. PLA needs the cold zone of the hotend to stay cool. A hot chamber causes heat creep and jams.
  2. Pre-heat the chamber. Run the bed at max temperature for 10-15 minutes before starting ABS/nylon prints. The chamber needs time to reach temperature.
  3. Filter fumes. ABS, ASA, and nylon produce fumes during printing. Use the printer's built-in filter or add an external carbon filter.
  4. Do not enclose the electronics. The mainboard, stepper drivers, and power supply generate heat and need cooling. Most well-designed enclosures vent electronics heat outside the chamber.
  5. Dry filament before use. The warm, enclosed environment does not help with wet filament. Dry nylon and PC before every print session using a filament dryer.

Final Thoughts

An enclosed printer unlocks materials that open-frame printers simply cannot handle reliably. For ABS and ASA, a passive enclosure like the Bambu Lab P1S is sufficient. For nylon and polycarbonate, the Qidi X-Plus 3's active chamber heater provides the extra thermal stability these materials demand. And for the ultimate in customization, a Voron 2.4 with a chamber heater mod gives you full control over every thermal variable. Whatever you choose, the enclosure is what separates printers that dabble in engineering materials from printers that master them.

BG

Written by Basel Ganaim

Founder of 3DSearch. Passionate about making 3D printing accessible to everyone. When not building tools for makers, you can find me tweaking slicer settings or designing functional prints.

Learn more about 3DSearch →

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