ASA vs. PETG vs. PLA: Choosing Materials for Interior Car Parts

The single biggest factor in whether a 3D-printed interior part lasts is the material it’s printed in. A part that looks perfect on the bench can warp into a taco on a summer dashboard if it’s the wrong filament.

PLA — avoid for interiors

PLA prints beautifully and is cheap, but it softens at temperatures a parked car easily reaches. It’s fine for prototypes, not for parts that live in the sun.

PETG — a solid middle ground

PETG handles heat far better than PLA and is tough, making it a reasonable choice for many interior parts that don’t sit in direct sunlight all day.

ASA — the interior workhorse

ASA is specifically UV-stable and heat-resistant, which is why it’s our default for dashboard and cabin parts. It resists the exact conditions — sun and heat — that destroyed the original. That durability is why we spec it for parts like the SC300 vents.

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