Bambu Lab A1 Filament Temperature Guide

The Bambu Lab A1 is a fast, well-tuned bed-slinger that handles most common filaments beautifully — as long as your temperatures match the material. Here are sensible nozzle and bed starting ranges for the A1's standard 0.4 mm hardened-steel-compatible hotend, plus notes on when to nudge each value.

Temperature ranges at a glance

These are starting points for the stock A1 hotend. The A1 is an open-frame printer with no heated enclosure, so high-warp materials like ABS and ASA need extra care. Bambu Studio's auto-calibration (flow dynamics and flow rate) runs before each print by default — let it.

MaterialNozzleBedPart cooling
PLA200–220 °C55–60 °C100%
PLA+210–225 °C55–60 °C80–100%
PETG230–250 °C70–80 °C30–50%
TPU (95A)220–240 °C40–50 °C30–60%
ABS240–260 °C90–100 °C0–20%
ASA240–260 °C90–100 °C0–20%
A note on ABS and ASA: the A1 has no enclosure, so large ABS/ASA parts will warp and crack. Print small, keep cooling near zero, block drafts, and consider a brim or a draft shield. PLA, PLA+, PETG, and TPU are the A1's comfort zone.

PLA and PLA+: the easy wins

PLA is the A1's home turf. Start at 210 °C nozzle and 60 °C bed with full cooling and you will get clean, fast prints. PLA+ blends run a touch hotter — around 215–220 °C — because the additives that make them tougher also raise the melting point slightly. If you see stringing on PLA, the spool is probably damp; if layers look rough, raise the nozzle 5 °C.

PETG: hotter nozzle, less fan

PETG wants more heat than PLA and far less cooling. Begin at 240 °C with the bed at 75 °C and the part-cooling fan around 40%. Too much fan is the number-one cause of weak, brittle PETG on the A1. PETG also bonds hard to the textured PEI plate, so lift parts only after the bed has cooled, and avoid a heavily squished first layer.

TPU: slow and steady

Flexible TPU prints well on the A1's direct-drive extruder, but keep speeds low — 20–40 mm/s — and use only light cooling. A nozzle around 230 °C with a 45 °C bed is a reliable start for 95A TPU. Skip the AMS lite for very soft filaments and feed from a spool holder to avoid jams.

ABS and ASA: possible, with caveats

Both materials need a hot nozzle (around 250 °C) and a hot bed (90–100 °C), with cooling turned almost all the way down so layers stay fused. The real challenge is the lack of an enclosure: heat escapes, corners curl, and tall prints crack. Keep parts small, add a brim, and shield the printer from drafts. For frequent ABS work, an enclosed machine is the better tool — but the A1 can manage small functional parts.

Let auto-calibration do its job

Bambu Studio runs flow dynamics calibration (the printer's version of pressure advance) and flow-rate calibration automatically. Leave these enabled, especially when switching filaments, and the A1 will compensate for differences between brands. For finicky spools, run a manual flow-rate and temperature calibration once and save the result to that filament profile.

When to adjust

Every spool is a little different, so treat these ranges as the middle of the road and dial in from there. A five-minute temp tower per new filament is the single best habit for consistent results on the A1.

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Want exact numbers for your A1 and your spool? Printer Studio has dialed-in starting settings like these for 78 printers and every common filament — get it on the App Store.
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