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Mar 14, 2024 13 tweets 5 min read Read on X
We CT scanned a Stanley Quencher cup to look for the lead that’s supposedly inside. Here’s what we found, and what it says about how these cups are made… 🧵
These cups have been a viral sensation, increasing Stanley’s revenue 10X since 2019. But late last year, social media influencers discovered lead in the cups. Stanley confirmed the cups contain lead, but says the lead doesn’t contact the cup’s contents. So what’s going on?


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Here’s a @lumafield CT scan of a Stanley Quencher. Using X-ray images taken from different angles, we’ve constructed a 3D model that includes internal and external features. We can crop into the cup to see its cross section.
@lumafield By the way, you can explore our scans yourself right here: . Now on with the teardown…lumafield.com/article/findin…
@lumafield Industrial CT scans differentiate materials by density; here less-dense materials, like the cup’s plastic lid and handle, are colored blue. Denser materials are colored orange and red. There’s a very dense material at the bottom of the cup… Lumafield industrial CT scan of a Stanley Quencher cup
@lumafield Insulated cups like the Quencher have two layers of stainless steel separated by a vacuum that inhibits heat transfer. Sitting just above the bottom of the outer layer is a bright red blob: this is lead solder. Below it is a stainless steel disc. Why is there lead in the cup? Lumafield industrial CT scan of a Stanley Quencher cup, showing its assembly from two layers of stainless steel and a pellet of lead solder.
@lumafield These cups are manufactured by fabricating the inner and outer stainless steel layers separately, then welding them together at the top. A hole is left in the bottom of the outer layer, and the cup is placed in a vacuum chamber to extract the air from between the layers. Lumafield industrial X-ray CT scan of a Stanley Quencher cup, showing bottom detail with lead solder pellet visible.
After the air has been extracted from between the cup’s inner and outer layers, the hole in the bottom of the cup needs to be sealed before the vacuum chamber is opened. The tried-and-true method is to insert a small pellet of lead solder between the cup’s layers during assembly, then heat the cup inside the vacuum chamber until the lead melts and seals the hole.
@lumafield Why not use unleaded solder? Lead is an ideal material from a process control standpoint; it has a low melting point and highly predictable characteristics. Lead solder is still sometimes used in electronics for this reason, even though unleaded solder is widely available.
@lumafield This type of tradeoff is very common in manufacturing: accept an undesirable but high-performance material as part of your process, or invent a new process at higher cost, lower performance, and/or higher defect rate.
@lumafield In any case, our CT cross section shows that the lead is entirely shielded, and its user won’t be exposed to lead at all. If the medallion covering the lead solder is pried off, it might become accessible—but in that case, a replacement cup is covered by Stanley’s warranty. Lumafield industrial CT scan of a Stanley Quencher cup, showing the stainless steel medallion at the bottom that prevents users from coming into contact with the cup's lead solder seal
@lumafield Check out the CT scans of the Stanley Quencher and a more detailed writeup here! lumafield.com/article/findin…
@lumafield And if you’re interested in how industrial CT works and what it’s used for, check out this explainer video:

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More from @JonBruner

Jan 30
Do water filters actually do anything? We CT scanned several popular water filters before and after use to see what they’re able to keep out of your body. Here’s what we found… 🧵
These are before-and-after @lumafield scans of a Brita water filter; it’s filled with a blend of activated carbon and ion-exchange resin and claims to trap chlorine, sediment, and heavy metals like lead. The filter medium swells with use, and it also gets denser. How do we know? Lumafield industrial X-ray CT scans of a Brita water filter cartridge, before and after use
Industrial CT scans capture both geometry and relative density. We start by taking hundreds of X-ray images from different angles, then reconstruct them into a 3D model that can be sectioned and analyzed. A dark area in a 2D X-ray image could be either thicker material or denser material; by rotating the object we’re scanning, we can separate geometry from density. In this @lumafield CT scan, density is visualized as a blue-red color map.
Read 13 tweets
Dec 4, 2024
This looks like an ordinary USB-C connector, but when we CT scan it, we find something sinister inside…🧵
Last year we CT scanned a top-of-the-line Thunderbolt 4 connector and were astonished to find a 10-layer PCB with lots of active electronics. A lot of people saw the scan and wondered whether malicious electronics could be hidden in a tiny USB connector.
The answer is yes. This is an cable created by @_MG_, a security researcher and malicious hardware expert. It looks like an ordinary USB cable, but it can log keystrokes, inject malicious code, and communicate with an attacker via WiFi. Let’s see inside… O.MGThe O.MG cable has what looks like an ordinary USB-C connector
Read 15 tweets
Oct 8, 2024
We just announced a major breakthrough in X-ray CT technology at @lumafield: scans that take hours with conventional CT will now take seconds. Here's why that's important 🧵
A CT scan is the richest possible source of industrial inspection data: it gives you a full 3D model of your part, inside and out, along with relative density information. But it's always been too slow for use in high-volume production environments—until now.
By bringing scan times down to as little as 0.1 seconds, we've overcome the major drawback of CT. Now it's a practical inspection technology for high-volume production. Comparison of various industrial inspection technologies, including visible light 3D scanning, contact metrology, ultrasonic inspection, AXI, and X-ray CT
Read 7 tweets
Sep 25, 2024
Pens are made by the billion, require insane precision, and still work almost every time. We CT scanned a few common pen types to see what’s inside... 🧵 Lumafield industrial X-ray CT scans of a fountain pen, a ballpoint pen, and a rollerball pen
First up: a fountain pen 🖊️ These date back to the 10th century, but practical designs appeared in the 19th century. When the pen is tilted, gravity pulls ink from a cartridge to the nib. Capillary action pulls the ink through a slit in the nib, where it flows onto the page. Here are the 2D X-ray radiographs we captured of a fountain pen; we use software to reconstruct them into a 3D model (next tweet).
Here’s the 3D reconstruction of a retractable fountain pen—the Mahjohn A1. Our CT scan of the pen tip shows a spring loaded door that opens and closes to prevent the ink from drying out and to protect the nib.
Read 12 tweets
Apr 9, 2024
We CT scanned an Apple Vision Pro! We also scanned two Meta headsets. Here’s what we found inside, and what it says about the two companies’ approach to AR/VR and to hardware development in general. 🧵
Here are our industrial CT scans of the Meta Quest Pro and Meta Quest 3 headsets. If you want to explore these scans, head to . Now let’s see what we found… lumafield.com/article/apple-…
Apple and Meta have taken different approaches to the market: the Vision Pro is a premium technology showcase for early adopters, while the Meta headsets are priced for accessibility in order to get as many people into the metaverse as possible. Comparison of Apple Vision Pro, Meta Quest Pro, and Meta Quest 3 headsets with Lumafield industrial X-ray CT scans
Read 23 tweets
Mar 28, 2024
This is an industrial X-ray CT scan of a Luer activated valve—a tiny medical connector that costs just 75 cents but is remarkably complex. Let’s take a look at how it works… 🧵
Luer connectors are used to join medical tubing for fluid delivery—think tubes that hook into IV bags, or needles that fit onto the ends of syringes. Hospitals use thousands every day. They twist together with less than one turn and must be secure and completely leakproof. A handful of Luer connectors
These connectors have an added feature: silicone valves that stop fluid from leaking out when disconnected. The valves are silicone sleeves with a slit at one end. The two connectors shown here work differently…Image
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Lumafield industrial X-ray CT scan of a pair of Luer activated valves
Read 10 tweets

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