Cheese Slicer Sheath
Description
If you use the type of cheese slicer that was invented in Norway in 1925 by Thor Bjørklund, according to Wikipedia, then maybe you too put it with the cheese in the fridge.
I was bothered by it getting dirty and getting everything else in the fridge cheesy. So I made this simple sheath to cover it. The slicer fixes itself easlily in the sheath by its elasticity, and since the sheath is open at both ends, it cleans well in the dish washer.
I was bothered by it getting dirty and getting everything else in the fridge cheesy. So I made this simple sheath to cover it. The slicer fixes itself easlily in the sheath by its elasticity, and since the sheath is open at both ends, it cleans well in the dish washer.
Instructions
Print with two shells/perimeters, and no need for infilling.
I printed the one shown in the photo on an Orca v0.30 using a .5mm nozzle and .3mm layer height. If the perimeters do not attach for you, you must modify the wall thickness in the .blend file and export a new .stl. The build is tall, but works well for me with some 40mm/s perimeter speed.
If your cheese slicer have greatly different dimensions, feel free to modify the model in the .blend file to suit your slicer.
I printed the one shown in the photo on an Orca v0.30 using a .5mm nozzle and .3mm layer height. If the perimeters do not attach for you, you must modify the wall thickness in the .blend file and export a new .stl. The build is tall, but works well for me with some 40mm/s perimeter speed.
If your cheese slicer have greatly different dimensions, feel free to modify the model in the .blend file to suit your slicer.


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