ABS is good for anything that needs to hold up over a long time. It has great creep resistance, which means it doesn't deform much over time like a lot of other plastics. It can also hold up to higher heat, and takes impact well. And you can use acetone to give it a super high quality finish.
For printing, to be honest it's a huge pain. It's very difficult to print unmodified ABS on a regular printer. That said, you could put an enclosure around it, print with an ooze shield (added in the slicing program), a big brim, and turn your bed up as hot as possible. 100 C may work, but higher is better. Turn off the cooling fan. And print with a high temperature for the nozzle to reduce risk of delamination.
You can use a regular PEI bed, but you may have to use "ABS juice" to get it to stick well. Just abs dissolved in acetone brushed onto the build plate.
You can also increase the extrusion width of the bottom layers to 150%, which will help it stick.
Enclosures can be a bit of a pain. I've seen people use Lack tables from Ikea a lot. Having a little heater inside one should work well. Something like this, which has a thermostat and thermal protection: https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B07SH8S5QW/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_fabc_6RQNHAVT5TXWWQV2EE69
For anyone else that's wondering about ABS, try TitanX. That stuff is awesome and prints like a dream with no enclosure. And it can still be acetone smoothed.