Название: Gadget Nation
Автор: FastPencil Premiere
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Отраслевые издания
isbn: 9781607466956
isbn:
TDT Moving Systems is now headquartered in Vancouver, Washington, where Thomas and his girlfriend Brenda Castine, who works full-time in the business, moved to be closer to his family. The growing company now seeks investors to go international. “We do have distributors in other countries and are looking to file patents in many of them.” It looks like Thomas Dent III has found the Shoulder Dolly to be not only an uplifting and moving experience, but also a weighty career.
EasyDown™
Easy Down, for Those Hard Up
for a Way Out
Did you know that fire departments’ ladders can only go up to six floors—and only from a side street—and only if the fire trucks get there in time?
After the tragedy of 9/11, it’s no surprise that a colleague of Herb Loeffler’s, Ivars Avots, recognized the need for a means of escape from tall buildings if the normal exits, such as stairs and elevators, aren’t available. Looking through newspaper articles about tragedies, however, he discovered that the need for an escape route isn’t a rare occurrence. People get trapped not only in 100-story buildings, but also in eight-story buildings. Ivars had a vague idea for a solution, but didn’t have the technical background to make it work. He needed an engineer’s brain and an inventor’s heart to take this leap with him. He found that in co-worker Herb Loeffler.
Both men worked for a Boston-based industrial research company before the company closed its doors. Herb, an MIT graduate in mechanical engineering who also has a degree in industrial design, now a 71-year-old, semiretired product designer, became the brains of the operation. The project was funded by the idea man and another colleague of the Boston firm.
Concluding that a market exists for an individual “descender” device that required only minimal skill to operate, they worked off a rappelling model that mountain climbers use. But while mountain climbers are trained to manage the speed of descent, the average person isn’t. Another issue: rope is heavy. One thousand feet of rope is strong enough to hold the weight of a single person, but weighs more than a person can lift. A thousand feet of cable has the same strength as 100 feet of rope. So they went with cable.
The next step was deciding what to put the cable on. Mountain climbers throw their ropes over the side of the cliff and use a device to slide down. That’s not practical for this use. Herb explains, “The cable needed to be on a reel with speed control—something that could sense the speed and apply the right amount of friction so the thing couldn’t run away with you. A panicky person with no training should be able to use it safely.”
As a product designer, Herb kept it simple. For the automatic model, he used a centrifugal clutch, as in snow blowers and chainsaws, to provide the speed control necessary. When the user goes faster, the clutch puts on the break harder. For the manual model, Herb added a handbrake for starting and stopping. A knob releases the cable. As you crank in one direction, it lowers you down; if you stop cranking, it stops moving. You aren’t actually cranking your own weight; you’re just releasing a clutch. Because you can crank only so fast, the handbrake provides speed control. The crank also allows you to get used to how the harness feels while dangling out of the window before letting go of the brake. Then you can go down gently. Easy does it. Hence the product name—EasyDown.
Just the thought of having to use a product like this one has me shaking. But I guess if I were trapped, I would learn to love my EasyDown.
The manual model comes in at a third of the cost and half of the weight of Herb’s automatic model. “The manual model is the device of choice from five to ten floors. Any higher and you’d want the automatic model . No one would want to crank that far in an emergency. And with its lower price, the manual model is where the market would go. But our biggest concern is that people don’t want to think about safety.”
It’s a serious concern—after all, we humans don’t like to think about our own deaths, much less prepare for them. But even if individuals don’t want to contemplate mortality, companies do. Herb sees a potential market with companies that sell safety equipment to firefighters or miners, for example.
The team applied for a patent two years ago and have had some action on it. They haven’t gone into production, but a partially completed design proves they can manufacture them at a moderate cost. To make it cost-effective, they envision producing 5,000 units. At 100,000 units, the price would be cut in half.
The fact that we might ever need an escape product can be depressing. But the probability that it might save our life, well, that’s the upside to EasyDown.
At Play
We work hard and we play hard. Americans are very proud of how seriously we play. We tell our kids that games are all about fun, but for most of us, games are all about winning. Inventors know we have a passion for play. They know we’ll spend our hard-earned cash to make that playtime even better.
So while the rest of us are busy playing our games, inventors are busy trying to make those games easier, more accessible, and more interesting. Whether it is being able to watch sports with hands-free binoculars or turning a pickup truck into a basketball court, these inventors have made recreation their playing field.
You’ll meet some inventors who have come up with entirely new games. Will Trangleball® replace volleyball? Will you go crazy over the Going-Going Crazy® Game? I found an inventor who is trying to make fishing easier and still another inventor who claims to have made a good old-fashioned turkey shoot so simple that it is almost child’s play. There’s even an inventor who has found a way to mix Christmas and Hanukkah. Inventors go where angels fear to tread.
If you are serious about your playtime, then get ready to meet some men and women who are serious about their playtime inventions.
Pick Up Hoops™
He Shoots, He Scores
To understand 40-year-old Jason Parr, you need to know that this guy was a gym rat. He lived to play basketball. He described himself to me as a “hoop head.”
When Jason wasn’t playing basketball, he earned his living working as a coordinator for an off-site data protection company called Iron Mountain. But even so, Jason was still a “hoop head.” He and his co-workers always tried to get together after work to play some hoops, but going to a nearby indoor or outdoor court meant complications. Why not a basketball hoop in the parking lot at work? Great idea, but the boss wasn’t crazy about it. But if they wanted to pay for the hoop and put it in, it was fine by him.
Jason thought about it, including getting “one of those so-called portable types to take to and from work.” СКАЧАТЬ