About 3D Printing Calculators
3D printing rewards makers who treat the slicer as an engineering tool rather than a magic box. The difference between a print that finishes overnight in clean, glossy layers and one that fails at hour nine with a tangled bird's-nest on the bed almost always comes down to numbers the operator either ran or guessed at. The AllCalculators 3D printing hub gathers the math that FDM hobbyists, resin printer owners, Etsy POD sellers running farms of Enders and Bambus, prop and cosplay builders, and small-shop production printers reach for during every print job, every filament swap, and every machine tune.
The filament weight calculator converts the volume your slicer reports into actual grams for the material density you loaded (PLA at about 1.24 g/cm³, PETG at about 1.27, ABS at about 1.04, TPU around 1.21, carbon-fiber-filled nylons closer to 1.15) so you know whether the spool on the machine will finish the job or strand you at 87 percent. The filament length calculator works the same volume backward into meters of 1.75 mm or 2.85 mm stock, which is the number that actually matters when you are deciding whether to swap to a fresh spool before bed. The print time calculator sanity-checks the slicer's often-optimistic prediction against realistic acceleration, jerk, and travel-move overhead so your customer ship-date is honest. Infill-cost and per-job cost calculators turn grams, kWh, machine-hour amortization, and a target margin into a defensible price you can quote without losing money on every order.
This is the single most important spreadsheet a print-for-hire operator never builds until the first month's electric bill arrives. Layer-count math returns exact layers for a given Z height and layer thickness, useful for slicing strategy on vase mode, ironing passes, and color-change scripts. On the tuning side, pressure advance, retraction, and Z-offset calibrators turn the test-tower workflow into precise numbers instead of eyeballing a calibration cube, and a filament-shrinkage tool corrects dimensional drift on parts that must fit. Bed-warmup energy estimates the kWh and minutes a heated bed actually draws before a print can start, which matters for farm scheduling and for honest cost-per-print numbers. The resin print volume calculator converts an MSLA scene into milliliters of resin at your chosen exposure, so the bottle on the shelf survives the batch.
And the FDM vs SLA cost tool compares both processes head-to-head on identical parts so you know which printer is the right home for a given job. Use these tools to quote confidently, tune deliberately, and stop guessing at numbers your slicer is happy to let you assume.
When to Use a 3D Printing Calculator
- Converting a slicer's reported volume into grams for the actual filament density you have loaded on the machine
- Estimating how many meters of 1.75 mm or 2.85 mm stock a job will consume before deciding whether to swap spools
- Building a defensible per-job price from grams, kWh, machine-hour amortization, and a target margin
- Comparing the true cost of an identical part printed on FDM versus MSLA resin before choosing a process
- Dialing in pressure advance, retraction distance, and Z-offset from calibration tests rather than eyeballing a cube
- Sizing the bed-warmup energy and minutes a heated bed adds to every job in a print farm schedule
- Returning exact layer counts at a chosen layer height for vase mode, ironing, and color-change scripting
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my slicer's filament weight estimate disagree with what I actually used?
Because the slicer multiplies extruded volume by a generic density (often a default 1.24 g/cm³ for PLA) and the spool you loaded may be PETG at 1.27, ABS at 1.04, TPU at 1.21, or a carbon-fiber-filled nylon at roughly 1.15. A 100-gram job on the slicer's default can be 90 or 110 grams in reality, which matters when you are deciding whether the spool will finish or you need to start a fresh one. The filament-weight calculator lets you enter the actual density from the manufacturer's spec sheet and returns honest grams, and the filament-length tool works the same volume back into meters of 1.75 mm or 2.85 mm stock so you can eyeball whether the remaining cone of filament on the spool is enough.
How should I price a print job for a customer?
A defensible price includes more than the cost of filament. Real cost-per-print is filament grams × cost per gram, plus electricity (printer wattage × hours × your kWh rate, including the heated-bed warmup draw), plus machine-hour amortization (printer cost ÷ expected lifetime hours), plus a labor allowance for slicing, loading, removal, and finishing, plus a target margin. The print-job-cost calculator combines all of those inputs so you can quote a number that does not lose money on every order. Print-for-hire operators who skip this math almost always discover the gap when the first quarterly electric bill arrives.
My slicer says 6 hours but the print actually takes 8. What is going on?
Slicer time estimates often assume the printer can reach its commanded acceleration and jerk on every move, and they undercount travel moves, retraction time, layer-change pauses, and the time the hotend spends waiting on the bed during initial layers. Real-world overhead of 15 to 40 percent over the slicer estimate is normal, and the gap is worse on small, detailed parts with many short segments. The print-time calculator applies a realistic overhead factor based on geometry complexity and machine profile so you can quote honest delivery dates.
When does it make sense to use a resin printer instead of FDM?
When the part needs sharp edges, fine surface detail, miniatures-grade resolution, or watertightness without post-processing, MSLA resin almost always wins on quality. When the part is large, structural, needs impact strength, will see UV exposure, or has to be cheap per gram, FDM almost always wins on economics and toughness. The FDM-vs-SLA cost calculator runs the same part through both processes using your actual material and electricity costs so the choice becomes a number rather than a feeling, and many shops end up running both, sending jewelry, dental, and figure work to the MSLA and functional parts and large enclosures to the FDM.