June 22, 2026
Description
Tired of 3d printed mosquito traps that turn into a sticky mess the second you try to refill them? Same. So I designed this one to solve that problem at the source.
The trick: it doesn't hold liquid — your bottle does.
Instead of printing a vessel and hoping it's watertight (it never really is), this trap uses a standard plastic bottle that has been cut in half as the liner. The bottle sits inside the printed shell, and the cone lid slips on top with a hole sized for mosquitoes to fly in and get stuck. No coating the print with resin, no waterproofing hacks, no sticky residue all over your hands and counter. When it's time to refill, just pull the bottle out, dump it, rinse, and drop it back in.
How it works:
Mosquitoes are drawn to the CO2 given off by the fermenting bait (recipe below), fly in through the cone opening, and have a much harder time finding their way back out than they did finding their way in. Set it near where you sit outside, refresh the bait every week or two for best results.
This is the classic CO2-attractant bait — cheap, easy, and it works by mimicking the carbon dioxide mosquitoes use to find their next blood meal.
You'll need:
Instructions:
The yeast feeds on the sugar and produces CO2 as a byproduct, which slowly releases through the bug hole and draws mosquitoes in. Fermentation typically keeps going for about a week before it needs a refresh — toss the old batch, rinse the bottle, and mix a new one.
License:
Standard Digital File License
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