Pouring His Heart Out Ahwatukee inventor is saving businesses and consumers money BY PAUL MARYNIAK Steve Abbit has had a busy couple of years doing things that most people never could imagine doing. When the longtime Ahwatukee resident wasnât on the phone at all hours of the day and night lining up companies around the world to execute his vision, he was grappling with metal cylinders, plastic molds and cardboard boxes. That all this activity started with a bottle of Baby Rayâs Barbecue Sauce is startling enough. But when you know what this activity createdâand the potential Abbit sees in itâyou could easily end up thinking, âWell, Iâll be damned.â Abbit has invented the mother of all funnels. Christened Freestand, itâs an adjustable funnel that fits just about any bottle, jar, can or other liquid container. Its purpose is simple: draining every last drop of liquid from those containers without having to shake them, spank them or even hold them. Freestandâs applicationsâand market potentialâappear endless. It can drain bottles, jars and other containers that hold almost anything you can pour: ketchup and barbecue sauce, moisturizer and other liquid cosmetics, detergent and dish soap, even motor oil and the containers baristas pour flavored syrups from. âThere are guys out there who want to use this for transmission fluid and brake fluid and very expensive motor oils and things like that,â he said. âIâve got friends who are race car drivers and spend $98 a quart for some of their fluids and now you start thinking about this: If they waste 20% on average of all fluids that come out of bottles and itâs 100 bucks a quart, that adds up.â Abbit believes he can persuade the Jiffy Lubes, Starbucks and Mary Kays of the world to see that his product can save them big bucks in product costs and worker time. Freestand is not all about dollars and cents for Abbit, a retired psychologist and corporate consultant who, at 50, has paved a new career path. âIâve made a lot of companies a lot of money and I donât want to do that any-
12
|
APRIL 2020
Steve Abbit, who helped create LifeLock, the identity-protection service, is pushing his latest invention, Freestand. (Submitted photo)
more,â says Abbit, who helped invent Lifelock, the identity-protection service. âI want to help you and me,â he explains. âI want to save us money. I want to save our environment. I donât want to do corporate anymore. ⌠Itâs bureaucratic and thereâs lots of red tape and lots of politics and I just donât want that. I want to feel good about what I do.â Abbit figures Freestand can help save the planetâand even some marriages. His research has discovered that 27% of couples âfight about getting the last dropâ out of one container or another. âThen there are those people who are cutters,â Abbit said. âThey just cut open bottles and they scoop it out. Well, 14% of the time, those people wind up in the hospital.â As for the environment, he cites data indicating that every one of the approximate 79.2 million families in America uses 150 plastic food, cosmetic and other containers annually. If every family had Freestand, he reasons, âAmericans could save 3.6 billion plastic bottles from ending up in landfillsâ while saving $250 to $400 per year buying new containers of ketchup, motor oil, makeup and whatever else they normally replace before every last drop is gone. Every step he took to develop the
$29.99 Freestand involved painstaking, methodical and sometimes frustrating hours as he assembled a small army of independent contractors to give birth to his baby. And it really did start with a bottle of Baby Rayâs. He was barbecuing chicken on his lakefront patio in Lakewood when he started pounding the bottom of the upside-down bottle, then finally laid it against another bottle in an effort to drain the remnants. âIâm thinking to myself, man, I have done this like a thousand times and it falls over and I started thinking, âHow many people experience this?ââ Abbit got on Google and eBay, looking in vain for something that would save him the time-consumingâand somewhat tiresomeâtask of slapping container bottoms or just holding one upside down to drain the contents. Then, he started doodling on napkins, sketching designs for the device he couldnât find online. From there, he spent more than 18 months before he came up with Freestand. It has three aluminum, telescopic legs that lock in place at three different lengths that hold a high-density poly-
ethylene funnel. Two detachable narrow arms made with the same polyethylene can be snapped into the funnel rim to hold any container upright as it drains away. The polyethylene is BPA free, free of the cancer-causing chemicals found in lower-grade plastic. âIâm totally overengineered,â he says. âItâs made to last forever, and that was really what I wanted. Every single piece of this is recyclable, including the box.â In addition, there are disposable funnel liners. Each box comes with 15, and when someone runs out they can just go on myfreestand.com and order another 15 without chargeâfor as long as they want. Each piece of Abbitâs invention took many trials and errors to refine. âIâve been through probably four or five different iterations,â Ebbit explains. âThe first iteration was a catastrophe. It was a major failure. I probably hit a thousand reasons why I should have stopped. âBut I knew I could get there if I just kept going. Itâs like the light bulb, right? There are 10,000 ways not to make a light bulb. So, I came up with 1,500 ways not to make Freestand.â Lining up the experts to help him execute his design was as complicated as his invention is simple. He needed engineersâone for Freestand and one for the box it comes in. He worked with protypes on a 3D printer with an engineer in Florida and then with Moldworx, a Gilbert injection-molding company, to produce a working prototype. The legs were particularly challenging. âI probably interviewed 20 companies that make these legs,â he recalled. âI researched all kinds of different telescoping mechanisms, and I wanted something that locked because what I didnât want to have happen is have somebody put a container up there and it slides down,â he explained. In his early designs, he used plastic legsâbut they collapsed. He finally settled on aluminum legs with stainless steel nubs that lock into place. He spent months calling companies to get manufacturers on board. Because domestic manufacturers www.LovinLife.com