h a l f b a k e r yStill more entertaining than cricket.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
So you won't be Crest fallin. Sorry. <grabs thermos, heads to work> |
|
|
Sometimes, if you squeeze too-much toothpaste out of your tube, it pays to be able to suck just enough back in so as not to over-laden your toothbrush. Surely a valve of this description would invalidate that option? I'm not sure I'm ready to loose the flexibility of the traditional toothpaste tube, which, once mastered, can deliver exact-sized blobs of toothpase onto almost any bristly surface. |
|
|
[oniony]
I didn't know you could get pressurised toothpaste tubes. |
|
|
How about putting the toothpaste tube into a closed water filled container, and pressurise the water with a very small hand pump? Then measured dollops of paste could be dispensed. When the tube is nearly empty, the flexible part would be forced up into the shoulder area and held there by water pressure, ready for next time. |
|
|
It occurs to me [oniony] that your version is almost baked, in that you can buy pressurised toothpaste tubes with a valve at the top from which the paste emerges. Although this circumvents the fun (?) of installing a low pressure bathroom, it is still toothpaste under pressure moving into a lower pressure environment. |
|
| |