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We CT Scanned a Bag of Chips and 3D Printed the Results

In this Article:

  • CT scans of full bags of Cheetos, Doritos, and Ruffles captured the complete three-dimensional geometry of each chip, including internal void structure, surface texture, seasoning distribution, and the crumbs at the bottom of the bag, data that was exported as STL files from Voyager.
  • Individual chips were 3D printed from the scan data using a stereolithography resin printer, chosen for its ability to replicate fine surface detail, then hand-painted to match the color and texture of the originals.
  • The STL files and interactive Voyager scans are available to explore and download, making this one of the few CT scanning projects where anyone can print the results themselves.
  • 7.12.2023

    This project did not begin with a serious engineering question. It began with a bag of Doritos, a Neptune CT scanner, and the reasonable suspicion that chip geometry is more interesting than it looks. We were right, and we went further than we probably needed to.

    Here is what we did: we CT scanned bags of Cheetos, Doritos, and Ruffles, rendered them in full detail, 3D printed individual chips from the scan data, and painted them by hand until they were indistinguishable from the real thing at arm's length. The whole process took weeks. The chips were not edible at the end, but they were so realistic that our office cleaner threw them away by mistake.

    Why these three

    Cheetos, Doritos, and Ruffles each present a distinct geometric challenge. Ruffles have a repeating ridge pattern that varies subtly across each chip. Doritos are roughly triangular but with a surface texture of seasoning powder that gives them a granular, irregular topography. Cheetos are the hardest: the puffed corn structure is chaotic, full of voids and irregular protrusions, and the craggy orange exterior bears no resemblance to any engineered geometry. CT is the only practical way to capture all of that nondestructively and in full three dimensions.

    We also scanned the full bags. Bags of chips are famously mostly air, which the scans confirm, but the CT data also captures every crumb and fragment at the bottom of the bag with the same fidelity as the intact chips above them.

    From scan to model

    Each scan produced a detailed digital reconstruction of the chip's internal and external structure. We exported the scan data as STL files directly from Voyager and brought them into Blender to add color and surface texture, building out a complete digital replica of each chip down to the seasoning distribution. You can explore the scans yourself through the links below.

    Rendering

    The result of each scan was a highly detailed digital reconstruction of the chips’ structure and texture, but there was one missing element: their distinctive, otherworldly colors. Using our Voyager analysis software, we could easily download our scans as STL files and export them. Then we used Blender to add the chips' color and texture to create a perfect digital replica of the chips down to the crumbs at the bottom of the bag.

    You can download the STL files here, including models of whole bags of chips as well as individual snacks.

    3D printing

    We printed using a stereolithography resin printer, chosen specifically because SLA excels at the kind of fine surface detail the scans captured. We selected one chip from each variety, exported its STL, and ran the prints. Fifteen hours of print time, three isopropyl alcohol baths, and a final cure at 70°C later, we had three plastic chips that were geometrically exact replicas of their originals.

    Then one of our interns painted them. Starting from a white base coat, they worked up the color and texture of each chip by hand. The Dorito took the longest. The Cheeto looked disturbingly accurate.

    Explore the scans

    The Voyager links below let you rotate and examine each scan in full. You'll need a free account to get started. Once you're in, use the bookmarks on the left to navigate and the range map on the right to adjust the visualization. The STL files are available to download if you want to print your own.

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