

⚡ Conductivity Meets Creativity — Power Your Prints with Protopasta!
Protopasta’s Electrically Conductive Composite Black PLA filament delivers industry-grade conductivity (<10 ohm-cm) combined with easy, low-warp 3D printing at 210–230°C. Its sleek black matte finish and 1.75mm diameter on a 500g recyclable spool make it the go-to choice for engineers, makers, and STEM educators prototyping smart devices, sensors, and wearable electronics.












| ASIN | B00X8BQYVM |
| Best Sellers Rank | #38,810 in Industrial & Scientific ( See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific ) #707 in 3D Printing Filament |
| Brand | Proto-Pasta |
| Color | Conductive Pla Black 1.75mm, 500g |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars (78) |
| Date First Available | May 6, 2015 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 1.1 pounds |
| Item model number | CDP11705 |
| Manufacturer | Protoplant INC |
| Manufacturer Part Number | CDP11705 |
| Material Type | Polylactic Acid |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 8 x 8 x 2 inches |
| Size | Conductive PLA Black 1.75mm, 500g |
M**E
Very conductive for carbon filled pla
The filament is amazingly conductive considering its carbon filled pla. We use it for anti static party handling.
J**R
Easy to work with!
Worked just like pla+: tough, not stringy, with a matte finish. Much easier to work with than other "conductive pla" brands. Good value for the money, print quality is rarely an issue with the prusa mk4s. This holds true with this filament. It was a little sticky to the pei bed, but nothing a plastic scraper couldn't remove after it cooled down.
M**.
Good filament, lousy spool and winding
Four because it costs $100 a kilo but comes on the cheapest imaginable corrugated cardboard spool that keeps getting stuck in the AMS. I've printed dozens of spools with cardboard spools without a problem, will certainly make me think twice about buying from protoplasta again. That said, the filament itself is fine, prints well with stock settings, wasn't brittle and produced good prints. Using just using needle probes in a VOM, resistance was in the low kohm range over about 6". Probably low enough for shielding and strictly speaking, too low for anti-static. while you probably can't use it to carry useful power,, contact with it would cause an annoyingly hard to track down short. Treat it as a conductor and you'll be fine. Update: as I'm writing this and having to clear at least 4 jams so far, it may be more an issue with bad winding than just the spool, in any case, annoying for such an expensive product.
J**N
Brittle filament. Dirty print head. Really good results.
We've had great results with our prints, with beautiful detail and quick relays to our Arduino hook up. The filament is surprisingly brittle. We store it in a bag with silica dessicant, but still have frustrating prints that snap mid print or right at the end. Snapping also occurs when loading. The biggest frustration is that the filament residue seems to be left behind. We've had a series of prints with black speckles deposited within the color. If the print isn't painted the end results looks really bad, especially if you're trying to make a clear print.
~**~
It Works !
I am part of a community called Makers Making Change. We volunteer our time to make adaptive technology devices. I used this filament to print a palm ball stylus (a ball you can hold to operate touch screens). The original design called for a wire in the ball that runs down to the tip that contacts the screen. I thought about using conductive filament and found the Protopasta stuff. The palm stylus worked perfectly and looks great. The clients said the units worked perfectly. I have gone through two spools already with issue. Good stuff!
R**B
Plastic Solder! I'm a happy customer.
This does exactly what I wanted. I can use it as low-temp solder and apply it directly to metal wires to make low resistance joints. This plastic seems somewhat less hard than normal PLA, I have not found brittleness to be a problem. The resistance is hard to measure and seems to vary depending on the voltage potential across the plastic. Measuring the resistance of my first circuit (w/o voltage connected obviously) disappointed me with a really big number; however, when I turned on the power and the LEDs winked on I was not disappointed at all! Filament runs at PLA temperatures and smells mildly of PLA-Waffles. ABS temperatures do not appear to burn the filament. The MSDS for this product (posted on Proto-pasta's website) notes that the conductive polymer could potentially be bad for people HOWEVER it is completely encapsulated in plastic and should remain inaccessible to biology. Combine that with the fact that PLA can biodegrade; store this stuff carefully, keep it dry, discard scraps. This is new technology. So far I have enjoyed using this filament with my new MYNT 3D pen. I have had a prusa mendel for about 2 years but haven't actually run this through the printer yet. The cardboard spool is cool. I didn't expect to like that but it's lightweight and you can easily punch a hole to hook the filament for storage (that way you don't have to cut off a foot of filament like when the end doesn't line up with the pre-cut hole on a plastic spool).
B**M
NOT conductive…
I had really big hopes for this filament. But it doesn’t pass a simple continuity test. Super disappointed. Otherwise, its a great PLA filament… for 4x the price!
P**N
2-5k resistance isn't exactly conductive ...
So it took me a while until I got around to print with this filament. I was hesitant as reviews describe it as rather abrasive and will quickly wear down the nozzle but I felt I didn't have too much printing to do. Use case - small basic PCB for a few surface mount units to use inside enclosures I'm 3D printing. It felt like a great opportunity to make basic and simple routes directly onto a 3D printed surface inside the unit I created. However, a first test print of a 4x2cm "circuit board" gave me some bad results. It looks GREAT - no striking, it adhesives great to the surface and all in all, my expectations were high. Until I put a multi-meter to it. Over about 1cm I get about 2k resistance. A bit longer I get up to 5K resistance. This is a circuit were my resistors are 330ohms (yeah, small LED). It's not even close to being useful for anything low power. If you're interested in converting a gerber to stl for printing, I used KiCad's print to svg and then converted the svg to stl (lots of software can do that - even free online services). But while it looks great I'm not even going to try to put a component on it.
J**N
Very finicky to print with. High impedance is not great for my purpose.
R**O
Ordered 3 spools and it was unusually brittle. Kept breaking off during feeding into the printer. Have tried other brands of conductive PLA with no issue. Not reccomended.
H**G
Me enviaron un rollo de material totalmente distinto, no solo en propiedades sino tambien en dimensiones, lo que hace que ni siquiera pueda utilizarlo
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 weeks ago