


Description
"Coffee tastes better in a 3D printed cup"
The primary goal of this project was to see if a 3D printed cup could withstand the 97 ° C hot coffee. And it did!
PLease note that I did not actually drink out of the cup, i have no idea what's going on in there when the hot coffee and printed nylon come together, it simply does not feel safe (yet).
This print was done in Taulman 3D Nylon 618.
As always i have included an STL and a STEP file. TopSolid 7 sourcefile is also available.
Comments (7)
Sign in to leave a comment.
Thanks a lot for sharing this information with us. I will share this image on my website that is related to <a href="https://lamarzocco.com/ae/en/">Linea Micra</a>.
I like it a lot! Maybe you could provide a print out of your settings for making the cup watertight :) I have designed <a href="https://mudreview.com/30-serving-tin-reviewed/>30 serving tin of mud</a>I like it a lot!
Very nice! You can maybe upload a print to share what settings you used so that the cup is watertight :) I know I've ran into an issue where cups leak when 3D printed :(
Hello Karen, Try adjusting your extrusion wide to the same width as your nozzle. I work with Slic3r and the settings are under Print Settings->Advanced. You usually only need to adjust the aspects that are on the outside of the print such as Top Solid Infill, Solid Infill, and Perimeters, or if you are going to set it to 100% infill you can just change the default extrusion width.
If this doesn't fix your sealing issues then you may have to calibrate your extruder steps per mm.
Hope that helps.