Fruit Picker

| Manufacturing files | https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1182261 |
|---|---|
| Hardware license | CERN-OHL-S |
| Certifications | Start OSHWA certification |
| Type | |
|---|---|
| Authors | Josh Lawson |
| Status | |
| Years | 2015 |
| Made | No |
| Cost | USD 3.38 |
This project is made for people who wish to pick unreachable fruit from trees. Forcing fruit out of a tree causes it to bruise and spoil quicker than that that is picked from with care. The fruit picker is printed in two parts. It uses a regular 2 liter soda bottle along with five screws to assemble. It does also require an old broom handle or piece of pipe to use as a handle. This is a cheaper alternative to what is already on the market and is more universal in the handles it can use.
Bill of Materials
CAD Files
- File:Fork.scad
- File:Stem.scad
Extra Parts
- 1/8" x 3/8" sheet metal screw (x2)
- 1/4" x 1-1/4" machine screw (x3)
Tools needed for fabrication
- 3D printer
- Equivalent screw drivers to match screws used
Skills and knowledge needed
- There is no special skills needed to make this tool.
Technical Specifications
- If any changes to the design want to be done, open the SCAD file and adjust the parameters.
- Slicing instructions:
- Fill % = 50
- Speed = 70 mm/sec
- Layer Height =.15 mm
- No support Needed
- Print time with above settings will be about 3 hours per part
Assembly Instructions
- Cut bottom off of 2 liter bottle at desired location
- Screw sheet metal screws through bottle so they line up with holes in poth 3D printed parts
- Evenly screw last three screws to fix to handle
Cost savings
Cost of creating this hammer
*Filament needed: 82 grams @ $22.98/kg = $1.88 *Hardware needed: 5 screws @ $1.50 *At a total cost of $3.38
Commercial Equivalents
*Equivalent: $10.69
Gallery
-
Fork SCAD -
Stem SCAD
References
| Authors | Josh Lawson |
|---|---|
| License | CC-BY-SA-3.0 |
| Organizations | MTU, Michigan_Tech's_Open_Sustainability_Technology_Lab, MY4777 |
| Cite as | Josh Lawson (2015–2024). "Fruit Picker". Appropedia. Retrieved November 28, 2025. |