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Everyday
inventors
Ralph
Waldo Emerson wrote that every person 'is or should be an inventor'
RACHEL ROSS
A cool, Clever Cup for hot drinks
Coffee lovers know the hot-hand dance. Perhaps not by name, but they've
probably done it before.
Wrapped around a fresh cup of coffee, fingers dance to avoid constant contact
with the incredibly hot disposable paper cup. Sometimes this results in
an unfortunate spill of the beverage, right into an unsuspecting lap. Even
with a paper sleeve, the heat can get you — especially when the sleeve slips
and you wind up grabbing the exposed cup by accident.
But "Customers should expect safety with their coffee and tea," believes
Toronto inventor Conrad Martin.
Martin's Clever Cup provides safety using clever engineering. The surface
of his cup is convoluted: the paper is bent back and forth creating a series
of pleats and folds. The hand only touches the outer edge of those folds,
making the cup cool to the touch, even with a boiling hot beverage inside.
He demonstrates by boiling up water in a kitchen kettle. He pours some into
a standard Tim Horton's cup and some of it into his prototype.
The Tim Horton's cup can be held only for a second or two before the fingers
feel the sharp burning sensation. The outside of the Clever Cup barely gets
warm.
Martin estimates the cost is roughly the same as for the typical cups now
used — about eight cents each. Retailers pay up to 5 cents more for an insulating
sleeve, he says, so the inventor thinks Clever Cup offers potentially significant
savings. Moreover, the Clever Cup, he said, uses approximately the same
amount of paper as a cup plus a sleeve. So there's no added environmental
impact.
Martin said he's still in the early stages of acquiring venture capital
and is hopeful he'll be able to strike a licensing agreement with a major
coffee chain.
As with all inventions, the Clever Cup does have some hurdles to overcome.
Companies, Martin said, aren't keen on having their logo folded up on the
cup. Martin said he questions their priorities.
"What is more important: the look of the brand or public safety?"
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