Students invent Grippy Cap
Bottle Opener, Non-Slipping Go-Kart
Watch out Bill Gates. A pair of
RCS elementary school students has created inventions that will
make every bottled water drinker who can’t open the bottle
happy, as well as every slick-wheeled go-kart driver.
Pieter B. Coeymans
Elementary School students Ashley Ricci and Jared Powell have
won them semi-finalist status in the annual Invention
Convention. Their inventions – which were among 1,092 submitted
by area students – will be on display next month along with 98
others from across the Capital Region at the Schenectady Museum
and Suits-Bueche Planetarium.
From the 100 semifinalist, 25
finalists will be chosen to advance in the competition, said
Kathy Baumgras, who teachers fourth grade students Ashley and
Jared in the RCS Scholars/REACH program.
Ashley’s invention is the Grippy
Cap. She said that “Whenever I buy a water bottle or when my
mom packs one in my lunch, I can never get it open! And I’m
always thirsty! So I end up asking my mom or one of my friends
to do it. It makes me feel weak.”
The Grippy Cap, Ashley said, is
a regular cap, but with grippers on the edge that allow the
bottle owner to stick their fingers in and simply turn the cap
open.
“You put your fingers in them,
then turn the cap, and pop! It comes right off, and between
each gripper, there’s a soft, rubber pad, so it won’t hurt your
fingers!,” Ashley said.
Jared invented the Non-Slipping
Go-Kart.
Jared’s invention attaches sand
paper to go-cart wheels, addressing the problem of slick tires
he and others face.
By attaching sand paper so you
don’t slip. Say you were in second place and you spun out,
wouldn’t you be mad? That’s what my invention does, makes you
not spin out on the track,” Jared said.
Jared’s and Ashley’s inventions
are presently in the design and construction phase. The problem
and design of the solution won them placement as semifinalists
and the right to construct their designs for the May
competition, Baumgras said. The Invention Convention is a
statewide invention education program for public and private
school students. The goal is to stimulate the development of
students' creativity and imaginations, thereby building a new
generation of American inventors.