First Ever Ergonomic Tube Squeezer
The public is paying attention to this revolutionary new hand tool that allows them to easily empty all tubes
LOS ANGELES, CA / ACCESSWIRE / November 18, 2016 / Steve Galente likes to invent things that help people. His latest idea, “The Big Squeeze,” saves both time and money from tube products of all types.
To learn more about “The Big Squeeze,” please visit: https://goo.gl/Qe64p7
Just about everyone has had this experience: Struggling with the very end of the tube.
Tube-users of all types are often amazed to know that studies show up to 20 percent of any product can end up being thrown away.
The “Big Squeeze” gets every last bit of paste, gel, or cream, and with little effort.
The idea is similar to a non-mechanical can opener.
The design uses a set of gears to push all tube contents forward, easily opening everything from expensive prescription drugs to everyday tooth paste.
There are tube openers on the market, but many current designs for it are difficult to use. It’s often a strain to get the final tube contents. This is where the the “Big Squeeze’s” ergonomic design comes in to help.
Users simply place the end of the tube between the products’ two gears, squeeze the handles, and turn the crank. The tube is completely flattened to get all the tube’s contents.
“It’s perfect for young hands or those with arthritis who don’t want to suffer through squeezing and twisting a tube. But really, the ergonomic design makes it easy to use for everyone,” says inventor Galente.
Its features and benefits include:
– Saving time and money
– Easy to use, even for children
– Eliminates wasteful products going to landfills
– A boon to arthritis sufferers and others handicapped in some way
This unique and highly useful product is now moving from prototype to production. They are crowdfunding on Kickstarter to gather new investment funds. Backers will have a chance to pre-order the device at a special price and start enjoying the “Big Squeeze” as early as Spring of next year.
About the “Big Squeeze:”
Mechanical engineer Steve Galente and his team, that includes collaborator Clark Bruce in Denver, Colorado, spent several years testing both tubes and prototypes to open them.The team has 40 years of combined experience. They came up with a design to handle the wide range of products packaged in a tube. To learn more about the “Big Squeeze,” please visit: https://goo.gl/Qe64p7.
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SOURCE: The Big Squeeze
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