Innovative new zipper lands creators on TV
What he wished he had was a sleeping bag that could be instantly morphed into something with legs, so he could walk outside the tent but still stay toasty warm.
Marty, now 26, has been inventing since he was a kid at 8 he rigged a string to the switch in his bedroom so he could turn off the light without getting out of bed so he went to work trying to turn his discomfort into a product.
The aha! moment came a year and a half later, when he suddenly realized that the solution lay in the zipper itself. He hurried off to the store, bought a small wooden milk bottle, some screws and a key ring, and invented the prehistoric prototype of what eventually would be the Quad Zipper a device he predicts will revolutionize the apparel industry.
In the meantime, the quad zipper has catapulted Marty and his friend Josh Pace onto a reality TV show called "Made in the USA," sort of American Idol meets Thomas Edison.
The judges include University of Utah graduate Nolan Bushnell, creator of Chuck E. Cheese and the video game Pong, who, as the bad-cop judge, dismisses some of the contestants with an exasperated "I just don't get it."
The Quad Zipper is actually two zippers configured so that the teeth of one can be realigned to hook up with the teeth of the other. In that way the new zipper can open up or close off sections of cloth. "It's about compartmental transformation," Marty explains. While the standard zipper gets you into a sleeping bag or jacket, the Quad Zipper can turn that sleeping bag into a suit, and the jacket into a blanket.
"Let's say you're standing at your kid's soccer game," Marty demonstrates, slipping on a jacket that has been fashioned with a Quad Zipper. Pretty soon your arms are cold, but instead of just trying to pull them up through the sleeves so you can hug your body to keep warm, you just move the Quad Zipper on the sleeves to disengage them, turning the jacket into one continuous piece of fabric. Take off the jacket and it could become a backpack.
In the same way, skirts can be transformed into pants, gloves into mittens.
In the weeks to come, the Salt Lake team will be pitted against the inventors of a convertible stiletto-heeled shoe; a gripper for carrying sheetrock; a hydration apparatus that can be stored in football shoulder pads; an "instant waterfall"; and an "instant" hair extender.




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