Thingiverse

Strozzapreti die for Philips Pasta and Noodle Maker HR2375/06 by marcoajello
by Thingiverse
Last crawled date: 4 years, 8 months ago
This is a remix of Andreaweb80's fusilli die for the Philips Pasta and Noodle Maker HR2375/06.
It is sized to be annealed after printing (if you don't know what this is please look it up) and therefore shrinking down to spec. If you try to use it on the machine without annealing it most likely will not fit. You would need to probably scale it down 1-2% but it depends on a lot of variables so be prepared for some trial and error if you choose to go this route.
There is a lot of pressure on the die during extrusion so I printed at 100% and annealed after printing. It could work at lower infills but I figured I would make it as strong as possible.
I used specialty Food Safe PLA from filaments.ca but even so the die isn't technically food safe due to whatever impurities are introduced in the printing process and the microscopic ridges on the surface of the print that can trap food particles and breed bacteria. The annealing also mitigates this a bit by making the die dishwasher safe, but it is not at all like a smooth injection molded piece of plastic.
All of which is to say: PRINT AND USE AT YOUR OWN RISK.
I am also including a little cleaner tool or you will go crazy trying to dig out unextruded dough and two blank dies if you want to try and make your own shapes.
It is sized to be annealed after printing (if you don't know what this is please look it up) and therefore shrinking down to spec. If you try to use it on the machine without annealing it most likely will not fit. You would need to probably scale it down 1-2% but it depends on a lot of variables so be prepared for some trial and error if you choose to go this route.
There is a lot of pressure on the die during extrusion so I printed at 100% and annealed after printing. It could work at lower infills but I figured I would make it as strong as possible.
I used specialty Food Safe PLA from filaments.ca but even so the die isn't technically food safe due to whatever impurities are introduced in the printing process and the microscopic ridges on the surface of the print that can trap food particles and breed bacteria. The annealing also mitigates this a bit by making the die dishwasher safe, but it is not at all like a smooth injection molded piece of plastic.
All of which is to say: PRINT AND USE AT YOUR OWN RISK.
I am also including a little cleaner tool or you will go crazy trying to dig out unextruded dough and two blank dies if you want to try and make your own shapes.