Aero Organizer
Aero Organizer is a planned modular station intended to give competition gear a fixed place so setup, handoff, and reset are easier to repeat.
What Aero Organizer is
Aero Organizer is a planned modular station intended to give competition gear a fixed place so setup, handoff, and reset are easier to repeat.
The workflow objective is defined, but final modules, supported equipment, and public print files are still pending.
A competition kit can contain filters, caps, scales, tools, dosing containers, towels, and small accessories that are individually simple but collectively easy to misplace. The problem is not storage alone. It is the time and attention lost when the layout changes between practice runs or when a small part disappears under another item.
The intended control is station layout: where each item begins, where it returns after use, and whether missing equipment is visually obvious. It addresses workflow consistency rather than any direct brew variable.
- Assign each frequently used tool or consumable a visible compartment or module.
- Arrange modules in the order the brewer reaches for them instead of treating the organizer as passive storage.
- Use the empty positions as a reset checklist between practice brews or competition rounds.
- Keep the system modular so a brewer can carry only the equipment required by the current recipe.
- When repeated setup and teardown create avoidable searching or forgotten items.
- When a practice station needs to match the competition layout closely.
- When several Brew Supply tools and small accessories need one readable home.
- It does not decide which equipment belongs in a competition kit.
- It does not make an oversized workflow efficient merely by giving every item a slot.
- It does not protect fragile equipment unless a future module is specifically designed and tested for that purpose.
- It does not replace a written packing list or the event's equipment rules.
- The modular architecture is planned; compartment dimensions and compatible equipment are not yet a public specification.
- Future files must state which modules are storage aids and which, if any, are suitable for transport protection.
- No public download or release date is implied by this page.
Planned
The best fit is a brewer whose recipe is already stable but whose station setup, reset, or equipment checks still consume attention.
Brew Supply is independent and not affiliated with AeroPress or the World AeroPress Championship. Planned printed parts must be validated for fit, heat, food-contact, and safe use before they are treated as finished brewing hardware.
A fixed layout can make a workflow easier to inspect, but Brew Supply has not published timing studies or a claim that the organizer improves competition results.
Start with the workflow problem, not the promise of a better cup
A useful precision tool should make one decision or physical action easier to repeat. The first test is therefore operational: can you describe what changed, hold the surrounding recipe steady, and return to the same setup on the next brew? Taste still matters, but taste should be evaluated after the tool has demonstrated that it controls the narrower variable it claims to address.
Compare the normal workflow with the tool-assisted workflow using the same coffee, dose, water, grind, timing, and service target wherever possible. Record mistakes and setup time as well as successful brews. A tool that creates a cleaner measurement but adds too much friction may be valuable for structured testing and unnecessary for everyday brewing. That tradeoff is part of the result rather than something to hide.
Do not change several Brew Supply tools at once when the goal is to learn what one of them contributes. Add the smallest useful control, repeat the comparison, and keep an exit path back to the simpler method. This makes the product easier to judge honestly and prevents a complete competition setup from becoming more complicated than the recipe needs.
Aero Organizer is a documented product direction, not a released print. The page explains the problem, intended control, and current boundaries so the concept can be evaluated without pretending final geometry or performance already exists. Compatibility, materials, cleaning, safety, and repeatability still need to be resolved before a public file can replace the disabled availability state.
Brew Supply separates an idea, a documented workflow, and a downloadable release. A landing page can exist before a file so the intended use and limitations are clear, but it must not turn a planned concept into an availability claim. When files are published, the download destination—not an old screenshot or copied model—is the authority for the current version. Feedback is most useful when it names the version, printer and material, fit, workflow conditions, observed failure, and whether the result could be repeated.
Before printing, check whether the linked hub actually contains the named product and whether its version matches the documentation you are reading. A profile link is a discovery destination, not proof that every concept on this site already has a downloadable file. Planned pages keep the unavailable state visible until that distinction changes.
Keep the original method available during testing. If a printed part does not fit, clean easily, survive the intended temperature, or make the workflow easier to explain, stop using it and record the failure before changing the model. Open-source iteration improves when unsuccessful conditions are documented as carefully as successful ones.
Competition legality is a separate check. Review the current event rules and confirm the exact printed version before adding any accessory to a competition kit.
Not currently. The public concept is a modular organization system. Protective transport claims require a tested enclosure and are not made here.
The final compatibility list has not been published. Future modules should name the exact equipment and dimensions they support.
No. Aero Organizer remains planned and has no public product-specific file or release date.
How Brew Supply separates measurable controls, workflow aids, and brewing decisions.
Read AeroPress precision tools guideA practical framework for choosing gear that earns its place in a competition setup.
Read AeroPress competition gear checklistA guide to hidden variation and the difference between controlling a variable and improving a cup.
Read Why AeroPress brews stop matching