Nylon 3D Printing: FDM vs. SLS for Functional Prototypes and Small-Batch Production
The choice between FDM (fused deposition modeling) and SLS (selective laser sintering) for nylon parts is one of the most consequential process decisions in additive manufacturing. Both use nylon — but the mechanical properties, surface quality, design freedom, and cost structures are fundamentally different.
This guide cuts through the marketing noise to give engineering buyers a clear decision framework. We cover the technical realities of each process, a direct property comparison, and real-world guidance for common applications in automotive, industrial equipment, and consumer products.
Process Fundamentals: How FDM and SLS Actually Work
Understanding the mechanical difference between the two processes explains most of the property and quality trade-offs that follow.
FDM(용융 증착 모델링) extrudes molten nylon filament layer by layer through a heated nozzle (typically 230-280°C for nylon). Parts are built on a heated bed, and support structures are printed in the same or a breakaway filament. The bond between layers is primarily thermal diffusion — not molecular fusion — making layer adhesion the primary weakness.
SLS(선택적 레이저 소결) fuses nylon powder (typically PA12) using a high-power laser that sinters powder particles together in a heated build chamber (typically 170-190°C). No support structures are needed because unsintered powder supports overhanging geometry. Parts are fully dense in all directions — more isotropic than FDM.
Mechanical Property Comparison
The table below presents tensile, impact, and thermal properties for nylon FDM and SLS parts tested per ISO standards. Values represent typical properties of well-optimized parts.
| 속성 | PA12 SLS (typical) | PA6 FDM (typical) | PA6 FDM (optimized) | 참고 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 인장 강도(MPa) | 46-50 | 40-50 | 50-58 | SLS PA12 limited by porosity |
| Tensile Modulus (GPa) | 1.7-1.9 | 1.5-1.8 | 1.7-2.0 | Similar range |
| 휴식 시 연신율 | 10-15% | 20-50% | 15-30% | FDM more ductile |
| Notched Izod Impact (kJ/m²) | 4.5-6.0 | 3-5 | 5-8 | SLS better for PA12 |
| HDT at 1.82 MPa (°C) | 175-182 | 65-75 | 65-75 | SLS PA12 much higher |
| Moisture Absorption (24h) | 0.5-1.0% | 5-8% | 5-8% | PA12 far superior |
| Isotropy | High (90%+) | Low (60-70%) | Low | FDM highly anisotropic |
| Surface Roughness (Ra, µm) | 6-12 | 8-15 | 5-10 | SLS smoother after bead blast |
Design Envelope: What Each Process Can and Cannot Do
Beyond mechanical properties, the geometric capabilities of each process determine which applications each can serve.
| Design Factor | FDM Nylon | SLS Nylon (PA12) | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum wall thickness | 0.8 mm | 0.5 mm | SLS |
| Minimum feature size | 0.5 mm | 0.3 mm | SLS |
| Overhang requirements | Requires supports | Self-supporting | SLS |
| Internal channels | Requires supports | Natural hollow printing | SLS |
| Large parts (>300mm) | Good | Limited by build volume | FDM |
| Dimensional tolerance | ±0.3 mm | ±0.2 mm | SLS |
| Smooth surface finish | Poor (layer lines) | Moderate (rough powder) | SLS |
| Post-processing ease | Easy (sand, paint) | Moderate (vapor smooth) | FDM |
Material Cost and Production Economics
For engineering buyers evaluating 3D printing against CNC or injection molding, understanding total part cost — not just material price — is essential.
| Cost Factor | FDM (Nylon) | SLS (PA12) | 참고 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Material cost ($/kg) | $45-80 | $60-110 | SLS powder more expensive |
| Machine cost (depreciation) | Low-Medium | 높음 | SLS machines 3-5x more expensive |
| Support material waste | 10-30% | 0% (unused powder reusable) | SLS wins for complex parts |
| Post-processing labor | Medium | Low-Medium | Depends on surface requirement |
| Batch efficiency | Low (serial printing) | High (stackable parts) | SLS wins for batches |
| Best economics | Prototypes, large parts | Small complex parts, batches | Process selection by geometry |
Application-Specific Recommendations
The right process depends on your application’s requirements — there is no universally superior technology.
| Application | Recommended Process | 재료 | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Functional gears (dry environment) | SLS or FDM PA6-CF | SLS PA12 or PA6-GF FDM | Strength and wear resistance |
| Functional gears (wet/oily) | SLS PA12 | PA12 SLS | Chemical resistance, low moisture |
| Snap-fits and living hinges | FDM PA6 | PA6 FDM filament | Ductility, flexibility |
| Chemical-resistant enclosures | SLS PA12 | PA12 SLS | Broad chemical resistance |
| Large housings and covers | FDM PA6-GF30 | PA6-GF30 FDM | Large format, structural |
| High-heat components (>150°C) | SLS PA12 | PA12 SLS | HDT 175°C vs 70°C for FDM |
| Low-volume bridge production | SLS PA12 | PA12 SLS | No tooling, batch economics |
| Early-stage prototypes | FDM PA6 | PA6 or PA66 FDM | Lowest cost, fastest turnaround |
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Which process produces stronger functional prototypes?
A: SLS produces parts approximately 20-30% stronger in the Z-direction due to better layer fusion and no need for support structures. SLS parts have isotropic properties similar to injection molded nylon. FDM parts are weaker between layers, making them suitable for visual prototypes or non-critical applications.
Q: What’s the minimum feature size I can achieve?
A: FDM typically achieves 0.4mm minimum wall thickness with standard nozzles, though specialized nozzles can reach 0.25mm. SLS achieves approximately 0.8mm walls and 0.5mm minimum details. For very fine features, consider specialized PA12 fine powder grades or alternative technologies like MJF.
Q: How do costs compare for batch production?
A: SLS becomes cost-effective at 20+ identical parts due to nesting capability—multiple parts can be sintered simultaneously in the powder bed. FDM is more economical for 1-10 parts but has linear cost scaling. For production volumes over 100 units, injection molding becomes the most economical option.
Q: Can I use SLS parts as injection molding prototypes?
A: Yes, SLS PA12 parts closely match injection molded PA12 properties (within 10-15% for most mechanical properties), making them excellent for functional testing. However, surface finish and dimensional accuracy will differ—expect SLS surface roughness of 5-15μm Ra versus 0.5-1.5μm for injection molded parts.

