
TPU Pellets
Eolas Prints TPU pellets are 100% virgin, dye-free thermoplastic polyurethane in granule form for pellet-fed 3D printers. With a Shore 93A hardness rating, these pellets sit in the semi-rigid range of the TPU spectrum — flexible enough to absorb impact and compress under load, firm enough to hold geometry and resist permanent deformation. They are the pellet-format equivalent of standard TPU filament, with the cost and throughput advantages that pellet-fed printing provides at volume.
Key Specifications
| Material | Thermoplastic Polyurethane (TPU) |
| Grade | 100% virgin — no regrind or recycled content |
| Colourant | Dye-free (natural pellet colour) |
| Density | 1.21 g/cm³ |
| Shore hardness | 93A |
| Skin-safe | Yes — suitable for wearable applications |
| Print temperature | 220–240°C (printer-dependent) |
| Bed temperature | 30–60°C |
| Available sizes | 500 g / 1 kg — bulk big bags available on request |
Shore 93A — What It Means in Practice
Shore A hardness measures the resistance of flexible materials to permanent indentation. At 93A, this TPU is on the firmer side of the flexible spectrum — comparable to a shoe sole or a firm rubber gasket. It bends and compresses under manual force but springs back cleanly without permanent deformation. For comparison: a standard eraser is around 60A, a car tyre tread around 65–75A, and a hard hat liner around 90–95A. Applications that suit 93A TPU include phone cases and protective covers, flexible hinges and snap-fit enclosures, anti-vibration mounts, wearable device components, and any part requiring impact absorption with dimensional stability.
Processing Notes
TPU requires dry pellets — moisture in the material causes bubbling and stringing during extrusion. Store in sealed bags with desiccant between uses and dry at 70–80°C for 4–6 hours before printing if pellets have been exposed to ambient humidity. TPU prints best at moderate speeds on pellet-fed systems; too high a throughput rate can cause inconsistent flow with flexible materials. Direct-drive screw extruder configurations handle TPU significantly better than Bowden-style pellet systems. For tuning help, see our PETG, TPU & ASA settings guide; new to pellets? Start with our European buyer's guide to pellets.
European-Made · Shipped from Stock
These TPU pellets are European-made by a specialist manufacturer certified to ISO standards, and shipped from Eolas Prints' stock in Cantabria, Spain. A REACH statement is available on request. Available from 500 g and 1 kg up to bulk big bags for production-scale printing.
Original: $11.29
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Description
Eolas Prints TPU pellets are 100% virgin, dye-free thermoplastic polyurethane in granule form for pellet-fed 3D printers. With a Shore 93A hardness rating, these pellets sit in the semi-rigid range of the TPU spectrum — flexible enough to absorb impact and compress under load, firm enough to hold geometry and resist permanent deformation. They are the pellet-format equivalent of standard TPU filament, with the cost and throughput advantages that pellet-fed printing provides at volume.
Key Specifications
| Material | Thermoplastic Polyurethane (TPU) |
| Grade | 100% virgin — no regrind or recycled content |
| Colourant | Dye-free (natural pellet colour) |
| Density | 1.21 g/cm³ |
| Shore hardness | 93A |
| Skin-safe | Yes — suitable for wearable applications |
| Print temperature | 220–240°C (printer-dependent) |
| Bed temperature | 30–60°C |
| Available sizes | 500 g / 1 kg — bulk big bags available on request |
Shore 93A — What It Means in Practice
Shore A hardness measures the resistance of flexible materials to permanent indentation. At 93A, this TPU is on the firmer side of the flexible spectrum — comparable to a shoe sole or a firm rubber gasket. It bends and compresses under manual force but springs back cleanly without permanent deformation. For comparison: a standard eraser is around 60A, a car tyre tread around 65–75A, and a hard hat liner around 90–95A. Applications that suit 93A TPU include phone cases and protective covers, flexible hinges and snap-fit enclosures, anti-vibration mounts, wearable device components, and any part requiring impact absorption with dimensional stability.
Processing Notes
TPU requires dry pellets — moisture in the material causes bubbling and stringing during extrusion. Store in sealed bags with desiccant between uses and dry at 70–80°C for 4–6 hours before printing if pellets have been exposed to ambient humidity. TPU prints best at moderate speeds on pellet-fed systems; too high a throughput rate can cause inconsistent flow with flexible materials. Direct-drive screw extruder configurations handle TPU significantly better than Bowden-style pellet systems. For tuning help, see our PETG, TPU & ASA settings guide; new to pellets? Start with our European buyer's guide to pellets.
European-Made · Shipped from Stock
These TPU pellets are European-made by a specialist manufacturer certified to ISO standards, and shipped from Eolas Prints' stock in Cantabria, Spain. A REACH statement is available on request. Available from 500 g and 1 kg up to bulk big bags for production-scale printing.