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Ultralight Magnetic Fuel Canister Legs

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A1 mini
H2D
X1
A1
H2D Pro
P1P
H2C
H2S
P2S
X2D
P1S
X1 Carbon
X1E
A2L

0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
Designer
16 min
1 plate

Open in Bambu Studio
Boost
4
12
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0
9
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Released 

Description

Ultralight Magnetic Fuel Canister Legs — 1 g Each 

⛺ Magnetic Stove Legs for Ultralight Nerds

— Another chapter in my ongoing quest to replace perfectly functional outdoor gear with tiny plastic objects

If you hike with standard like 100 g gas canisters, you already know the problem:
tiny base + uneven ground + boiling water = a cooking setup with the stability of a caffeinated goat.

So I made these ultralight stabilizer legs.

But unlike most canister stands that merely clip onto the canister and pray to friction, these use a far more sophisticated retention system:

🧲 Magnets.

Because obviously that was the next logical step in my descent into ultralight madness.

Each leg contains a tiny 6 mm × 2 mm neodymium magnet that helps the legs stick securely to the canister itself. Not loosely. Not “good enough.”
Actually snap onto it.

And because magnetic overengineering is beautiful, the legs can also stick together for storage.

If you install:

  • 2 magnets north-up
  • and 1 south-up

…the three legs form a neat little magnetic bundle instead of rattling around your cook kit like tiny plastic castanets.

⚙️ Features

  • Fits standard 100 g fuel canisters
  • Requires 3 printed legs
  • Each leg weighs:
    • ~1 g in PETG
    • plus one 6×2 mm magnet
  • 🧲 Magnetic attachment to the canister
  • 🧲 Magnetic self-storage
  • Surprisingly stable despite weighing basically nothing
  • Compact enough to disappear into your cook kit until needed

🖨️ Printing Notes

  • Material: PETG recommended
  • Supports: None
  • Print 3 pieces
  • Glue magnets in place with my trusted engineering companion:

🧪 Superglue

The internationally recognized solution to:
“I engineered this properly but I still need chemistry to save me.”

Check magnet orientation before gluing unless you enjoy creating anti-storage technology.

🧠 Why These Exist

At this point I’ve apparently developed a niche expertise in:

  • ultralight hiking accessories
  • tiny magnetic mechanisms
  • unnecessarily optimized plastic parts
  • and questionably food-safe outdoor gear

If you’ve seen my:

  • titanium pot lid clips
  • trekking pole connectors
  • Sawyer Mini accessories
  • ultralight coffee containers

…then yes, this is fully on-brand.

Tiny.
Functional.
Slightly obsessive.
And engineered by someone who absolutely weighs gear before and after removing support material.

✉️ A Completely Serious Challenge

I genuinely think these are among the best canister legs on MakerWorld.

If you find a better design:

I will personally write you a thank-you letter.

A real one.
Possibly while staring dramatically into the distance and questioning my CAD decisions.

🏕️ Final Thoughts

The moment these snap onto the canister, you immediately realize:
“Oh. This is how these should’ve always worked.”

Lightweight.
Magnetic.
Overengineered.
Slightly ridiculous.

Exactly how ultralight gear should be.

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License

This user content is licensed under the MakerWorld Exclusive License.

You may create derivative works based on this object, provided that all such derivative works are published exclusively on the MakerWorld platform and include proper attribution to the original creator. You may not share, upload, host, distribute, or publish this object—or any derivative work of this object—on any other digital platform, marketplace, or distribution channel. Commercial use of this object and any derivative works is strictly prohibited. This includes, but is not limited to, selling, renting, sublicensing, or using the object in any context in which you receive monetary compensation or other financial benefits.