Despite being relatively new (in terms of 3D printing tech), Multi Jet Fusion (MJF) has rapidly achieved industrial-scale maturity, proving its reliability and consistency in fabricating parts for automotive, manufacturing, healthcare, and consumer products.

HP hasn’t released a new MJF polymer 3D printer (instead focusing lately on its metal 3D printer line) there have been significant updates and new materials for the existing line. The nylon white material is increasingly sought after in the medical, automotive, and consumer goods industries, because it offers post-processing opportunities for more vibrant colors and better light refraction.

3D printed concept shoes from Reebok/Botter and Decathlon are 3D printed Multi Jet Fusion technology (Source: Botter/Decathlon)

MJF has also been applied to footwear recently, not only in a new collaboration with French sport brand Decathlon​, but also 3D printed concept sneaker with luxury brand Botter. The shoes are printed in a flexible TPU material, which was also the material of choice for cycling gear maker Posedla for its custom 3D printed bike saddle called the Joyseat.

Whether you’re looking to buy an MJF 3D printer or order MJF parts from a service provider, understanding the technology’s pros and cons and how to unlock its full potential will help you know if Multi Jet Fusion is right for your 3D printing needs. In this article, we will cover all you need to know about Multi Jet Fusion 3D printing.

Complete Guide to MJF 3D Printing (Multi Jet Fusion)

The Basics of Multi Jet Fusion

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The HP Jet Fusion 5420W Solution, capable of printing white nylon parts (Source: HP)

Multi Jet Fusion is a 3D printing technology introduced to the market by HP in 2016. The company explains its technology is built on decades of HP’s investment in inkjet printing, jettable materials, precision low-cost mechanics, material science, and imaging.

In a nutshell, the technology involves using a type of liquid binding agent to fuse together powdered polymer material layer by layer. The technology gets its name from the multiple inkjet heads that carry out the process of distributing the liquid polymer (or binding agent).

We go more in-depth into the process below, but know that MJF is fast, detailed, and has proved itself to be reliable, which is why there’s hardly a 3D printing service around that doesn’t have at least one MJF machine among its equipment.

Don’t confuse HP’s Multi Jet Fusion with its Metal Jet printing process used in its metal printers, which is very similar but uses metal powder instead of plastic. Our focus here is the Multi Jet Fusion technology, which only uses plastics.

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Complete Guide to MJF 3D Printing (Multi Jet Fusion)

The Multi Jet Fusion Process

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The MJF process in five steps (Source: HP)

Although MJF doesn’t fit neatly into one of the seven 3D printing technology categories defined by the International Standards Organization (ISO), it is a type of binder jetting. All binder jetting 3D printing technologies use a liquid material jetted by an inkjet printhead onto a layer of a powder material. Traditionally, plastic or polymer binder jetting is a “cold” technology, but HP (and a few others we detail below) introduced heat, which substantially alters the process. This is why MJF is sometime in a category of its own.

In the Multi Jet Fusion printing process, the printer lays down a layer of material powder on the printing bed. Following this, an inkjet head runs across the powder and deposits both a fusing and a detailing agent onto it according to the digital model of the parts required.

An infrared heating unit also moves across the print. Wherever a fusing agent was added, the underlying layer “melts” together, while the areas exposed with the detailing agent doesn’t fuse completely, but acts as a layer to ensure surface quality. Areas with no agent apply remain a powder. The unfused powder supports the fused material, which generally eliminates the need for supports.

To finish the printing process, the entire powder bed – and the printed parts in it – are moved to a separate processing station. Here, most loose unfused powder is vacuumed up, allowing it to be reused instead of producing excess waste.

The video from HP below goes into a little bit more detail but note that the last half is about what MJF could achieve in the future, not what it does today.

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Complete Guide to MJF 3D Printing (Multi Jet Fusion)

HP's MJF Machine Lineup

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The HP 3D Jet Fusion 4200 series 3D printer (Source: HP)

There are essentially two sets of HP Multi Jet Fusion 3D printers and accompanying equipment: the HP 3D Jet Fusion 4200 launched in 2016 (and has had some upgrades since) and the HP Jet Fusion 5000 Series launched in 2019. Within the 5000 series is the 5420W launched in 2023, which is almost identical to the older 5200 lineup except that the print system is dedicated to white parts only.

HP has had other MJF machines, mostly for prototyping, that are now retired.

HP MJF Printers:

Build Volume (mm) Build Speed Materials Resolution/Min. Layer Height
4200 380 x 284 x 380 up to 4,115 cm3/hr PA11, PA12 (Evonik), PA 12 Glass Beads, TPA, TPU 600 or 1,200 dpi/ 0.08 mm
5000 380 x 284 x 380 up to 4,010 cm3/hr PA11, PA12 (Evonik), PA12S (Arkema), PA 12 Glass Beads, PP, TPU 1,200 dpi / 0.08 mm
5200 380 x 284 x 380 up to 5,058 cm3/hr PA11, PA12 (Evonik), PA12S (Arkema), PA 12 Glass Beads, PP, TPU 1,200 dpi / 0.09 mm
5400/5420 380 x 284 x 380 up to 3,381 cm3/hr PA12W (white) 1,200 dpi / 0.09 mm
5600 380 x 284 x 380 up to 3,466 cm3/hr PA12 (Evonik), PA12S (Arkema), PA12W (white), TPU 1,200 dpi/ 0.09 mm

The 4200

The 4200 series was HP’s first aimed at short runs and production volume parts. HP says it’s ideal for industrial prototyping and final part production environments.

Touted and an easy-to-use solution that can scale with your business, the 4200 uses HP’s proprietary fusing and detailing agents and materials. The system’s external tank enables the extraction of reused material from the processing station so it can be replaced with a different material.

An automated materials mixing and loading system streamlines your workflow and reduce labor. The suite of machines includes an enclosed unpacking and material collection system and a cooling module so you can remove a finished print bed and replaces it with a fresh one to minimize downtime.

The complete HP Jet Fusion 5200 Series (Source: HP)

The 5200

The 5200 series is HP’s dedicated 3D printer for volume production, meaning thousands or hundreds of thousands of parts. It features upgraded lamp power compared to the 4200 and a host of efficiency and speed advancements.

The 5200 Series includes variations — the 5210 and 5210 Pro — with various differences in running costs, volume, material compatibility, and internal component upgrades.

The 5400/5420

This printer, post-processing station, and build unit is not capable of printing gray parts. It’s exclusive to the company’s white nylon PA 12 material.

One advantage of printing with white parts as opposed to gray or black is that white parts are easier to dye with brighter colors. Because dyeing MJF parts is very common, industry customers have been seeking a solution to produce brightly colored, end-use parts.

White parts produced on the 5420W have also passed tests for several biocompatibility specifications including cytotoxicity. Sterilization has also been successful up to 132 ºC undergoing multiple cycles at times ranging up to 30 minutes.

If you already have a 5200 series printer in your fleet and would like to upgrade to 5420, HP offers an upgrade kit.

The 5600

The HP 5600 series printers are designed with flexibility and scalability in mind, HP says, making them suited to industrial manufacturing. These machines have been adopted at 3D printing service bureaus already for their higher yield rates and that help reduce costs. They also feature new optimized print modes and calibrations for consistent part quality, HP says.

In 2024, HP released a new ESD print mode for the HP Jet Fusion 5600, and reported a higher refresh rates of up to 90/10 material usage for BASF Ultrasint TPU01.

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Complete Guide to MJF 3D Printing (Multi Jet Fusion)

Pros & Cons of Multi Jet Fusion

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A rendering of HP MJF machines as a manufacturing solution (Source: HP)

Pros

  • Fast printing speed
  • High volume production cycles
  • Accurate printing for fine details
  • Low individual print cost
  • Design freedom as no supports are needed
  • Less waste due to powder recycling
  • Ability to color parts in post-processing
  • High-quality surface finish
  • Consistent mechanical properties

Cons

  • Expensive initial printer investment
  • All proprietary materials
  • Unable to produce some curved, hollow geometries
  • The final product is a gray without dying agents (except when printing with Jet Fusion 5420W Solution)

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Complete Guide to MJF 3D Printing (Multi Jet Fusion)

Materials for Multi Jet Fusion

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BASF and HP collaborated on a new industrial-grade polypropylene for MJF (Source: HP)

Initially, Multi Jet Fusion was only compatible with Nylon PA 12 powders. Although this is still the most common option, the breadth of available materials has expanded in the few years the technology has been on the market, with new ones still in development.

Although Multi Jet Fusion is a type of powder bed fusion, that doesn’t mean all powder bed compatible materials will work with MJF. In fact, the material list for MJF is much shorter than powder bed fusion, partly because it’s a proprietary HP process, but material manufacturers are responding to MJF’s growing popularity. In fact, in 2020, HP worked with BASF to develop a new durable and chemical-resistant polypropylene. Their latest addition is High Reusability PA 12 W, where the W stands for its white color and can be processed on their 5420W printing solution. Lubrizol also recently announced the launch of its latest MJF-compatible material, Estane 3D M88A TPU.

MJF-compatible materials include:

Rigid

  • PA 12 Nylon
  • PA 12 Nylon Glass Bead (GB)
  • PA 12 Nylon S (GB)
  • PA 12 Nylon W (white)
  • PA 11 Nylon
  • PP (polypropylene) by BASF Production

Flexible

  • TPA by Evonik/HP
  • TPU M95A Estane by Lubrizol
  • TPU01 Ultrastint by BASF
  • TPU M88A by Estane by Lubrizol

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Complete Guide to MJF 3D Printing (Multi Jet Fusion)

Industries Using Multi Jet Fusion

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With HP 3D printing, Triple Eight Race Engineering produces light-yet-strong parts, at faster speeds (Source: HP)

Multi Jet Fusion is a versatile technology that has found use in countless industries. It has helped manufacturers in all parts of their development processes, from prototyping to creating functional prototypes for field testing to manufacturing final parts.

Some industries that have found success with MJF include:

Automotive

MJF 3D printing is helping car and vehicle manufacturers reduce costs in parts production while boosting operational efficiency. A Spanish parts supplier (Continental Automotive Spain S.A.) for the automotive sector used MJF printing to develop a pneumatic gripper that helped them cut down on time when tooling new parts. At Jaguar Land Rover, car engineers are moving beyond brackets and interior trim and use HP Multi Jet Fusion to develop next-generation protective equipment for their factory workers. General Motors’ new 15,000-square-foot Additive Industrialization Center counts HP MJF machines among its 3D printing fleet for prototype parts, tools, fixtures, and end-use parts.

The 3D printed Raptor mask from Invent Medical is made on HP Multi Jet Fusion 3D printers (Source: Invent Medical)

Medtech

The benefits of 3D printing and digital manufacturing during the pandemic continue to grow, bridging supply chain gaps and increasing speed of design-to-part. HP and its global network of partners and customers have 3D printed well over five million parts to fill urgent needs and convene new ecosystems that enable local manufacturing.

The medical and dental industries are experiencing an explosion of  new 3D printed applications and mass personalization. The SmileDirectClub in Nashville, Tenn., has 60 HP Multi Jet Fusion printers working round the clock to make customized dental molds. HP Jet Fusion 3D printers are also changing the orthotics industry and enabling the production of customizable medical prosthetics. As one of the few pilate customers, Invent Medical manufactures custom orthotic and prosthetic devices with HP’s white PA12, offering up new post-printing coloring possibilities for pediatric care.

OVR Technology produces gadgets enabling the use of smell in virtual reality, targeting mainly the medical and therapeutic sectors. They were able to produce durable, highly detailed housings with complex geometry for their prototypes using MJF printers.

Eyewear is one of the fastest growing categories of consumer good made with HP Multi Jet Fusion 3D printing (Source: HP)

Consumer Goods

Many types of consumer goods require the production of low volumes of parts in complicated shapes. PepsiCo, one of the world’s leading food and beverage companies, found this out the hard way when they tried to design a small mask to go over drink cans as part of their product tie-in with the Black Panther movie.

The company tested various 3D printing technologies to replicate the fine details and the deep black color of the famous superhero’s mask. In the end, MJF came on top with the high production speed and durability it could provide.

HP also works with customers in the sporting goods and eyewear industry. Using Multi Jet Fusion, Oakley is reducing the product development stages of its eyewear selection as well as other athletic equipment. Moving from prototyping to end-use parts, Smith’s custom-fit 3D printed frame for the I/O MAG Imprint ski goggle was named one of Time Magazine’s Best Inventions of 2022.

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Complete Guide to MJF 3D Printing (Multi Jet Fusion)

Options & Cost of MJF 3D Printing Services

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Aerospace company Satair turned to 3D printing service provider Fast Radius to print safety components in red (Source: Fast Radius)

Although it provides a low unit costs than many other technologies, MJF 3D printers start at $100,000. Fortunately, most of the busiest on-demand 3D printing services worldwide have fleets of MJF printers at your disposal for one-off prints or ongoing serial production.

Because all MJF printers are manufactured by HP, all 3D printing services listed below can offer consistent part sizes and detail accuracies. This enables manufacturers to offer consistent part quality but localized production.

Just because all MJF printers are the same, doesn’t mean all MJF on-demand service providers are. When selecting your printing partner, focus on lead times, materials libraries, and additional services — such as coloring, polishing, chemical smoothing, design consulting, and NDA contracts — when choosing the best service for your purposes.

An easy way to pick the right third-party service provider for your needs is to use the 3D print price comparison platform Craftcloud, where you upload your part and MJF on-demand services provide quotes for you to pick from. Alternatively, check out our guide below to the top MJF 3D printing services.

MJF 3D Printing Price Charts: 5 Projects Compared

To give you a sense of that MJF parts will cost, we uploaded five sample projects to a range of MJF service providers. Our projected included:

  • Volume Project: 300 Cable Organizers
  • Artistic Project: 5 Octopus Tablet Holder
  • Multi-Part, Colored Project: 1 Self-Leveling Cup Holder
  • Complex Geometry Project: 1 Spiral Sphere Container
  • Flexible Low-Volume Project: 10 TPU Door Stopper

Our project location was Chicago and we experimented with ordering various colors and finished. Our results showed that there are a wide range of prices. Some companies have MJF printers and some really specialize in MJF 3D printing and can offer more post-processing options.

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Complete Guide to MJF 3D Printing (Multi Jet Fusion)

Alternatives to Multi Jet Fusion

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The Voxeljet X200 HSS and the Stratasys H350 SAF both use inkjets to bind nylon powder that is then fused with heat energy similar to MJF (Source: Voxeljet, Stratasys)

We did say that MJF is a unique technology but if you had to put it in one of the seven recognized types of 3D printing it would be a type of powder bed fusion roughly in the “binder jetting” category because it involves a liquid and a polymer powder. There are other takes on binder jetting that aim to give HP come competition.

Selective Absorption Fusion (SAF), is another proprietary powder bed fusion technology that comes from 3D printer and material maker Stratasys. SAF uses an infrared absorption fluid to fuse particles of nylon powder together in layers to build parts. Industrial-grade piezo-electric print heads jet the fluid in prescribed areas to create each cross-section of the part. This is followed by exposure to infrared energy, which causes the areas with fluid to melt and fuse together. The sequence is repeated until the parts are completed.

Stratasys’ SAF 3D printer is the H350.

Voxeljet offers a polymer powder bed fusion technology called High Speed Sintering that does not use lasers and enables fast print time (Source: Voxeljet)

Like MJF, SAF is a faster method for producing nylon parts than technologies using lasers. Both of these methods have similarities to High Speed Sintering (HSS) from Voxeljet.

Voxeljet’s HSS is similar to the laser sintering of polymers – only without a laser.  It use an infrared (IR) lamp combined with an inkjet print head to selectively apply an infrared-absorbing ink.

HSS has a large plastic range, including not only nylon and TPU but also to polypropylene (PP) and ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer (EVA).

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