The Best of Both Worlds

Most 3D printing forces a trade-off: you can have strong, functional thermoplastic parts (FDM) or smooth, detailed parts (SLA) — but not both.

HP’s Multi Jet Fusion changes that equation.

MJF builds parts from real thermoplastic nylon powder (PA 12, PA 11, or TPU) using a chemical sintering process. The result is a part that’s genuinely strong, dimensionally accurate, and smooth enough to use without heavy post-processing. Most importantly, MJF parts are fully dense with zero porosity — meaning they’re airtight and watertight out of the machine.

That’s a combination no other process delivers at this price point.


How MJF Works

Unlike FDM (which extrudes filament) or SLA (which cures liquid resin), MJF works with a powder bed:

  • A thin layer of nylon powder is spread across the build platform
  • An inkjet array selectively deposits fusing and detailing agents onto the powder
  • An infrared energy source passes over the bed, fusing the areas where agent was applied
  • The platform lowers, a new layer of powder is spread, and the process repeats

The detailing agent is what gives MJF its edge — it’s applied at part boundaries to create sharp edges and fine features while the fusing agent handles structural integrity.


When to Choose MJF

MJF excels when you need:

  • Watertight or airtight parts — zero porosity means fluid and gas containment without post-processing or sealing. Housings, manifolds, fluid channels, enclosures.
  • Functional nylon parts — real PA 12 nylon with excellent mechanical properties. Not resin, not PLA — actual engineering thermoplastic.
  • Good surface finish AND strength — SLA-like smoothness with FDM-level durability.
  • Complex internal geometry — powder bed processes don’t need support structures for overhangs, so you can design internal channels, lattices, and geometries that would be impossible with FDM or SLA.
  • Small to mid-volume production — MJF’s build speed and powder packing density make it cost-effective for runs of 50–500+ parts.
  • Snap fits, living hinges, and functional features — nylon’s flexibility and fatigue resistance make it ideal for mechanical features.

Real-world applications:

  • Fluid handling components for industrial equipment
  • Custom enclosures that need to be sealed against dust or moisture
  • Automotive intake manifolds and ducting
  • Production-grade jigs and fixtures
  • Consumer product housings going directly to market

MJF Materials

Material Properties Best For
PA 12 (Nylon 12) Strong, stiff, excellent detail. The workhorse. Functional prototypes, production parts, enclosures
PA 11 (Nylon 11) More ductile than PA 12, higher elongation at break Living hinges, snap fits, impact-resistant parts
PA 12 Glass Bead 40% glass bead fill. Higher stiffness and thermal resistance Structural parts, high-temp applications
TPU (Thermoplastic Polyurethane) Flexible, rubber-like. Shore 88A hardness Gaskets, grips, vibration dampening, wearables

MJF vs. Other Processes

MJF vs. FDM

  • MJF wins on: Surface finish, isotropy (equal strength in all directions), zero porosity, complex internal geometry
  • FDM wins on: Larger build volumes, wider material range (ULTEM, PC-ISO, ABS), lower cost for single large parts
  • Choose MJF when: You need sealed/watertight parts, better aesthetics, or isotropic strength

MJF vs. SLA

  • MJF wins on: Material strength (real thermoplastic vs. cured resin), durability, UV resistance, production suitability
  • SLA wins on: Finer detail resolution, transparent/clear materials, lower cost for small one-off parts
  • Choose MJF when: The part needs to function, not just look good

MJF vs. SLS

  • MJF wins on: Surface finish, build speed, cost per part at moderate volumes, color capability (with CB PA 12)
  • SLS wins on: Wider material selection (glass-filled nylons, flame-retardant variants), larger single-part builds
  • Choose MJF when: Surface finish matters and you’re running mid-volume production

How PartSnap Delivers MJF

We source MJF production through our qualified manufacturing network — the same partners we trust for injection molding, CNC machining, and other production processes. You get:

  • Engineering oversight — we review your design for MJF-specific considerations (minimum wall thickness, escape holes for trapped powder, feature resolution) before it goes to production
  • Process selection guidance — we’ll tell you honestly whether MJF is the right call or if FDM, SLA, or another process makes more sense for your specific application
  • Single point of contact — you deal with PartSnap, not a print farm. We manage quality, timeline, and delivery.

Get an MJF Quote

Tell us about your project. Upload your STL or STEP file and we’ll recommend the right process — whether that’s MJF, FDM, SLA, or something else entirely.

Request a Quote →

info@partsnap.com · 214.449.1455