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Oct 2014

Hello,

I work for a nutritional company and we need ingredient scoops of differing sizes, anywhere from 3ml to 30ml. We are wondering if there are any food-grade options for 3D printing. It seems after looking into PLA and ABS that neither are sufficient for our needs, but we could be wrong (since we’re novices at 3D printing!) Any information would be of great help.

Thank you,

Neal

  • created

    Oct '14
  • last reply

    May '16
  • 17

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Hi Neal,

Colorfabb’s XT- Copolyester is FDA food-contact compliant. Is that good enough?

If not, I thik you’ll find something suitable from Taulman.

Cheers!

Andy

Thank you for the reply, Andy. That is what we were looking for. Now, is it safe to assume that the majority of 3D printers can use this material to print, or are only certain printers able to handle this type of material?

Thanks!

Neal

It is my understanding that it is not the toxicity of filament that is the concern, but more the surface finish. A food grade surface cannot be attained even with smoothing methods post print. If you go 100x magnification, you’d see pits and holes which offers a breeding ground for bacteria and cannot be sufficiently cleaned. The standard alternative to apply 3d printing to food safe products is to produce a 3D printed mould to make food safe silicone parts.

Hope that’s helpful.

1 month later
12 months later

Hey everyone! Great question - a lot of people on the Pinshape 2 community were also asking about how to make their prints food safe so we just published a blog article about this very subject. It seems to be highly debated but there are steps you can take to make your scoops more food safe. Here’s a few food safe sealants 21 that we recommended in our blog article 8.

14 days later
6 months later