new tooling for pitcher

ivanfromwingkin

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how do you think of this product?:heart::heart::heart::heart:
 

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Hi Ivan,

I like the clear makings on the side of the pitcher. Will they stay there or will they wear off?

Rose
 
I'm curious about the motivation for this... if it's designed as a frothing pitcher, is it meant to be a lower-cost alternative to stainless? If so, I'm wondering how the difference in heat transfer will affect the frothing.
 
I also like the markings, and they should hold up over time, but I am not a fan of using synthetic materials involving hot liquids.
Stainless steel and glass would be my preference. For me, it is like drinking hot liquids out of a styrofoam cup or cooking on teflon.
IMHO.
 
There is always a market for a low cost alternative to a quality product. Your picture shows that you did an exact reproduction of a stainless frothing pitcher. I would be curious, though, to know who you feel is the target customer for this product since stainless is preferred for food contact in commercial environments.
 
I'm curious about the motivation for this... if it's designed as a frothing pitcher, is it meant to be a lower-cost alternative to stainless? If so, I'm wondering how the difference in heat transfer will affect the frothing.

sorry ,i didn't explain clearly....the plastic is designed and produced by Japanese......we creat a steel tooling for this ! of course ,steel is much better than plastic! it'a 1mm thickness ,stainless steel 304, 600ml :heart:
 
I also like the markings, and they should hold up over time, but I am not a fan of using synthetic materials involving hot liquids.
Stainless steel and glass would be my preference. For me, it is like drinking hot liquids out of a styrofoam cup or cooking on teflon.
IMHO.

:heart: totally agree!!!
 
There is always a market for a low cost alternative to a quality product. Your picture shows that you did an exact reproduction of a stainless frothing pitcher. I would be curious, though, to know who you feel is the target customer for this product since stainless is preferred for food contact in commercial environments.

agree with you .... forgive me that I did not explain well....we creat a steel tooling ,not plastic.....plastic is other brand...:coffee-bean:
 
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