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Ultralight Threaded Container — 4 tsp Capacity

IP Report

Print Profile(2)

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H2C
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Designer
59 min
1 plate

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58 min
1 plate

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Description

Light. Tight. And just the right amount of overkill.
This ultralight threaded container weighs only ~12 grams but feels way tougher than it should. Holds about 4 teaspoons of whatever — coffee, spices, screws, or small essentials for your next hike.

Engineered for a tight, almost waterproof thread that locks in perfectly once you’ve broken it in. No supports, no nonsense, just a clean, functional print that does exactly what it should.

(Not food safe — but I live dangerously. Wash before use and enjoy those extra microplastics for flavor.)

 

🧱 Ultralight Threaded Container — 4 Teaspoons Capacity

— Because Every Hiker Deserves Overengineered Coffee Storage

Let’s be honest — it’s just a tiny container.
But when you’re hiking, camping, or just appreciate unnecessarily precise tolerances, this little print might become your new favorite piece of gear.

I wanted something that was:

  • Lightweight but sturdy
  • Almost waterproof (emphasis on almost)
  • Perfectly threaded — not “good enough,” but “engineer-satisfying” good

So I made one. And now you can too.

It weighs just about 12 grams, holds roughly 4 teaspoons of coffee, and screws together with a clicky, confident feel once you’ve broken in the threads.

(If you’ve seen my Sawyer Mini Backflush Adapter or my ESP8266 Fish Feeder, you already know the theme: light, functional, and only slightly sarcastic.)

⚙️ Print Details

🖨️ Material: PLA (or whatever’s already in your printer — we don’t judge)
⚖️ Weight: ~12g
🧩 Supports: None
🧱 Print time: Quick and painless

🧠 Pro Tips (a.k.a. Read This Before Complaining About the Threads)

  1. Use dry filament. Moist filament ruins tight tolerances faster than you can say “delamination.”
  2. Let it cool before removing it from the print bed — patience pays off.
  3. The first few twists will feel like two rusty bolts in love. Don’t panic. That’s how the threads seat perfectly.
  4. Work the threads. Yes, really — you need to screw and unscrew the lid multiple times before it seats perfectly. At first, it’ll fight you like a rusty old transmission, but after a few twists, it clicks together beautifully. That’s the magic.
  5. Once they do, it’s easily the most satisfying twist-fit you’ll ever print.

☕ Uses (a.k.a. Ways to Justify Printing This)

  • 4 teaspoons of coffee (field-tested, repeatedly)
  • Spices, screws, trail salt, or anything small and dry
  • Basically, whatever deserves a tiny, waterproof home in your pack

⚠️ Disclaimer of Slightly Questionable Wisdom

It’s not food safe, technically.
But I live my life dangerously — and this container has yet to kill me.

Give it a light wash and let it dry before use. There may be some microplastic dust left over from printing.
(Yum, my favorite flavor.)

🧭 Final Thoughts

Light. Tough. Threaded tighter than your last deadline.
And for 12 grams of filament, you’ll get a twist so perfect you’ll find yourself opening and closing it just to hear it click.

Print it. Twist it. Smile smugly.

 

Boost Me (for free)

💸 Boost me if you like overengineered coffee jars, tight threads, and living dangerously with microplastics. Or if you just want to make me feel like my 12g of PLA was worth it.

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