A Living Resource
The 3D printing section of the USBA website is evolving. We are currently seeking to host a library of flight-tested files in the future.
If you would like to contribute to the first set of .STL boomerang plans, please contact [email protected].
3D printing is changing how boomerangs are designed, tested, and shared. What began as experimental prototypes is now a thriving field where digital precision meets aerodynamic intuition.
Designers and throwers such as Michele Apriou (France), Ricardo Bruni Marx (Brazil), and Collin De Greg (USA) have demonstrated that high‑performance 3D‑printed boomerangs can match, and sometimes surpass, traditional wooden models. Inside communities like “The World of Boomerang” on Facebook and maker forums worldwide, files circulate, tweaks are compared, and throwers refine geometry for every imaginable flight style.
1. Why 3D Printing Boomerangs?
The appeal of 3D printing lies in control, collaboration, and the ability to achieve geometries that are physically impossible to carve by hand.
- Rapid Prototyping: Print, test, adjust, and re‑print — all in one weekend.
- Digital Precision: Every millimeter of an airfoil profile can be digitally tuned and replicated.
- Accessibility: No sawdust, rasping, or heavy workshop machinery required for initial shaping.
- Community Sharing: STL and STEP files can be exchanged worldwide for collective open-source improvement.
2. Build Plate Size Constraints
The primary hurdle for many makers is build volume. Average adult competition boomerangs span 300–400 mm (12–16 inches), which exceeds the capacity of standard consumer printers.
| Printer Model | Build Volume (mm) | Suitable Boomerang Size |
|---|---|---|
| Creality Ender 3 / Prusa Mini+ | ~220 × 220 | Small models / Indoor / Child-sized designs |
| Prusa MK4 | ~250 × 210 | Compact tri-blades; most 2-arm designs won’t fit |
| Bambu Lab P1S / X1C | ~256 × 256 | Borderline for mid-size designs; diagonal placement required |
| Anycubic Kobra 2 Max | ~420 × 420 | Excellent for full-size competition and Long Distance prints |
| Voron 2.4 (350 build) | ~350 × 350 | The gold standard; fits almost all standard designs |
| Raise3D E2 CF / UltiMaker S5 | ≥ 330 × 240 | Easily handles competition-sized designs in one piece |
Workarounds for Smaller Beds
If your printer’s bed is too small, you can Segment the model (splitting arms into sections to be joined by epoxy) or use Alignment pins. However, for maximum structural integrity, printing the span in a single piece is highly recommended to ensure layer orientation follows the wing’s stress path.
3. Filament Options and Characteristics
| Filament | Density | Rigidity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| PLA / PLA+ | Light | High | Easy to print; brittle in extreme heat or impact. |
| PETG | Moderate | Moderate | Excellent impact resistance; high durability for grass catches. |
| ABS / ASA | Moderate | Stiff | UV resistant; ideal for outdoor use; requires enclosure. |
| CF‑ABS / CF‑Nylon | Higher | Extreme | Carbon Fiber reinforced; highest stiffness; needs hardened nozzle. |
| Nylon (PA12) | Light | Flexible | Indestructible but requires heat-setting to hold tuning. |
4. Slicer Settings for Aerodynamics
Boomerangs require specific settings to survive the centrifugal forces and the sudden deceleration of a catch.
- Layer Height: 0.15mm – 0.20mm. Thinner layers create a smoother airfoil for better laminar flow.
- Perimeters (Walls): 3–5 walls. The strength comes from the walls, not the infill.
- Top/Bottom Layers: 5–6 layers. This ensures a sealed, waterproof surface.
Infill Patterns and Performance
| Infill Type | Strength | Weight | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gyroid | High | Moderate | Uniform flexibility in all directions; mimics natural wood. |
| Grid / Tri-Hex | Very High | Heavy | Maximum rigidity; great for Distance and MTA models. |
| Concentric | Medium | Light | Allows for hover and slow return profiles. |
| Solid (100%) | Maximum | Maximum | Used for heavy-wind models but adds massive stress to motors. |
5. Post‑Processing and Tuning
After the print is complete, a printed boomerang must be treated like a wooden one to fly its best:
- Sanding: Lightly sand leading and trailing edges (400 grit) to remove layer lines.
- Weight Tuning: Pause prints to embed metal washers near wingtips for increased rotational inertia.
- Heat Setting: Gently warm the wings with a heat gun to set “Dihedral” (tips bent slightly upward).
Safety and Durability
Inspection: Never throw a print with visible layer delamination. Layer splits can cause a wing to shatter mid-flight. Velocity: Printed boomerangs often spin significantly faster than wooden models due to mass centralization. Always maintain safe distances and wear eye protection when testing experimental designs.
6. Community Collaboration
The world of 3D‑printed boomerangs is evolving monthly. For the latest files and insights, join the World of Boomerang Facebook group or search for designers on Printables and Thingiverse. Open exchange is the flight path to innovation.