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I would like to print lunch boxes, which I can put into the microwave.

How could I determine, if the print material is appropriate (dishwasher, food, microwave safe)?

Iter Ator
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  • You should ask a more specific question, like "Is material X when printed using Y process Z safe"? Attempting to stuff information about all possible materials, processes and types of safety in to one question doesn't seem wise. – Tom van der Zanden Jan 13 '16 at 10:31
  • I am not familiar with the print materials, so I would like to ask it before I buy one. Btw this is the top voted question in the definition phase. So it is considered a good question by the community. – Iter Ator Jan 13 '16 at 10:36
  • This is at least three separate questions. – Adam Davis Jan 13 '16 at 13:02
  • well it won't be food safe because most thermoplastics are porous making it great for harboring bacteria. I'm not sure about the others. – user2883506 Jan 13 '16 at 19:34
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    This is a very nice question, with a well define scope and parameters that can be addressed objectively. Expecting "is material X when printed using Y process Z safe?" as a question is an arbitrary expectation: one could object that formulation too is too broad, as it did not ask "...with a nozzle in W material and at temperature T, post-processed with technique Q", for example. This is a small site, with a tiny community around it. We should work to make it relevant and helpful. Comprehensively answering a question like "how to print functional microwave containers" would certainly help... – mac Jan 29 '18 at 21:39

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