Cool. How do you decide that your material is suitable for a "structural" application like this (or the E6 Atlantic wheels)? Do you have much of a choice of materials?
I print in 2 materials, PLA and PETG. PLA is inexpensive, gives crisp prints and is the friendliest to work with from a printing perspective. It sands and paints well in my opinion and can print in the smallest of nozzles for the highest resolution. PETG has higher wear resistance and higher temperature tolerance (I made the motor part out of it). It's also very 'slick', so moving parts are rather like delrin in that regard. Either are equally good as far as being strong enough for a model part at room temperature though.
The drive wheels for the E6 were printed in PETG because I was trying to finish a nearly empty spool, but PLA would've given better detail.
I'm in the middle of some significant upgrades to my printer (Direct drive and eventually an all-metal hot end) which will let me print ABS and Nylon, but PLA will likely retain it's top spot for me for model parts.