From Edutechwiki - Reading time: 2 minABS (here) stands for Acrylonitrile butadiene styrene. It is a kind of plastic. For example, car parts and Legos are made from ABS. This article describes its use as 3D printer filament
See also:
ABS comes in variants. It “is a copolymer made by polymerizing styrene and acrylonitrile in the presence of polybutadiene. The proportions can vary from 15 to 35% acrylonitrile, 5 to 30% butadiene and 40 to 60% styrene.” (Wikipedia)
Proportions + color pigments added will modify melting temperature and other behavior !
This implies that recommendations for your 3D printer only apply to the kind of ABS that was sold by the company (official recommendations) or that was bought by users (blogs, forums, wikis).
ABS doesn't stick well to common platforms (glass, kapton tape, plastics) and more importantly, larger and high objects will warp.
When I print ABS with my printer that is rather designed for PLA printing (a FelixPrinter):
To remove a print that sticks to well (e.g. something with a flat bottom), there a several strategies, for example:
Using pliers is dangerous, it may damage the print, the surface of the platform, platform alignment etc.
I rather print ABS in a corner of the platform, so that the remining glue won't inhibit me from getting PLA prints of the platform. It probably would be best to add a plate on top of the platform, but that requires recalibrating :(