Stanley stainless mugs

Yes, Stanley uses lead in its manufacturing process for its cups, but they only pose a risk of lead exposure if the cover on the bottom of the tumbler comes off and exposes the pellet used to seal the cup's vacuum insulation,” a Stanley spokesperson told TODAY."

Basically there is no danger as long as the cup isn't damaged.
 
No human contact points. Show the MSDS. Instead of Pb solder Ag solder would be safer (if even it's an issue and not a media hype). Ag solder would lead to a price >.
 
No human contact points. Show the MSDS. Instead of Pb solder Ag solder would be safer (if even it's an issue and not a media hype). Ag solder would lead to a price >.

Anybody want to bet that happens with all the news reports on the lead solder?
They can safely bump the price anyway with how popular the cups are, so why not blame it on changing the solder?
 
Stanley tumblers and bottles
Like I said, neither Stanley nor Target describes these items as being a "cup". To normal sane people, a cup is much smaller than a tumbler, a bottle or a mug. Perhaps that is the brain size of some self-annointed social media "influencers" who mistakenly call these a "cup".
 
Probably for weight, balance and some insulation. If they lowered the center of gravity and used a better insulation such as Kevlar or equivalent there wouldn't be a potential toxicity issue. All the potential positive safety data they can produce going forward isn't going to mitigate the damage that has already occurred. The marketing managers didn't work with the designers and manufacturing engineers who all didn't bounce this shit off the lawyers. This shit ain't gonna fly.
 
Sometime around the beginning of 2025, I noticed that sales at checkout of Stanley stainless mugs/tumblers dramatically decreased. What once had been a HUUUUGGGGGE seller apparently no longer is the must-have glamour status symbol.

Apparently the infatuation bubble burst against the Stanley tumblers on social media. The actual Stanley product was not suddenly being found defective, shoddy or unsafe, but self-annointed Internet influencers switched their allegiance towards one or more different brands.

Anyone wonder what the next hyper-popular consumer product, currently selling in large numbers at Target and other merchants, will abruptly lose its exaggerated desirability due to social media trends?
 

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