Vial Tray - 14 × 15 ml + Cap Storage - Weekly (Supplement) 3D model thumbnail

Vial Tray - 14 × 15 ml + Cap Storage - Weekly (Supplement)

by diy_mushroom_tek · via Thingiverse
FormatSTL
CategoryOrganisation
LicenseCC BY-NC-ND
Triangles5.1k
UploadedFeb 28, 2026
⬇ 17 downloads ❤ 2 likes 👁 47 views

Description

🧪🗓️ Weekly (Supplement) Vial Tray — 14 × 15 ml + Cap Storage This is a 3D printed weekly tray for 14 × 15 ml / 0.5 oz glass sample vials (≈ Ø23 mm ). It’s designed as a simple “ fill once per week ” system for powders like psyllium husk , creatine, electrolytes, etc. — and it also includes a cap parking area so the tops don’t roll away during refilling. ✅ What it’s for Weekly pre-portioning of powdered supplements (14 single doses) Travel-ready : grab a vial and go Cleaner workflow : vials stay upright, caps stay organized Also works for small parts (screws, magnets) or tiny sample batches Versions included A) Standard version (with cap storage) 14 vial slots + dedicated cap storage on the side Best for weekly refill sessions B) Slim version More compact footprint Focused on vial storage (minimalist) Bottle compatibility Designed around common 15 ml glass sample vials with aluminum screw caps : Capacity: 15 ml / 0.5 oz Approx. size: 2 × 7.2 cm (0.78 × 2.83 in) Vial diameter: ~Ø23 mm If your vials are slightly different, you may need to scale the model or adjust tolerances. Print notes Easy print (no supports needed depending on your orientation) Optimized for a 0.6 mm nozzle (but works with 0.4 mm too) PLA is fine; PETG also works well if you want extra toughness Tip: avoid “elephant’s foot” to keep the vial fit crisp Suggested workflow (fast & clean) Place all empty vials in the tray Park the caps in the cap slots Use a small funnel for powder filling Screw caps back on → done for the week Disclaimer This is an organizer tray . Use proper hygiene/food-safe handling practices for anything you ingest.
bottles cap holder portioning psyllium husk sample vials supplement travel tray vial weekly pill container

Originally published on Thingiverse