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3DPrinting
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You may want to look at the other reply to my post, they mentioned that a part that breaks should still be food safe. I don't work in the food industry, I'm just a 3D printer nerd, so I wouldn't know about things like that, I just wanted to make stuff for my own use.
I'm outdated as far as printer options, Prusa makes good printers without going into the really expensive enterprise tier, so that's where I would look.
I've sent a email to Prusa for more information. I really appreciate the insight
Parts breaking ending up in food is the biggest risk, but we run everything through metal detectors to try and prevent any risks
I think based on your comments and others we might go for Prusa options
There are metal-detectable filaments you can use, which may help (although I’m not sure if they’re food safe; presumably the suppliers will respond to business inquiries though!)