Popular Mechanics (South Africa)

PATENTED: Wheelchair­accessible forklift.

A forklift with a flat platform that allows a person using a wheelchair to operate it and incorporat­es additional control mechanisms for disabled drivers.

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(4) I was a teacher for ten years

at the James Rumsey Technical Institute in Martinsbur­g, West Virginia. I taught materials, distributi­on, and warehousin­g. We were very involved in a programme called Skillsusa that encourages education of a skilled workforce.

(5) We had the opportunit­y to go

to Washington, DC, to petition our legislator­s not to cut funding for trade schools. Money was really hard to come by then, and still is now. At a reception for Skillsusa participan­ts, the keynote speaker was a disabled veteran. His Humvee had hit an IED and blown his legs off. His message for the students was, ‘You’re young, you’re the future, and we need you to think outside the box so that people like me can work side by side with you’. One of my students looked over to me – they always called me Mr G – and said, ‘Mr G, he could never operate a forklift.’

(6) We went to a forklift junkyard

and bought the forklifts we wanted, tore them down, then built the thing from the ground up.

(7) A local business, Coty’s Auto Body,

painted it for us pro bono. The owner, Coty Graff, is a vet. I hired a student who understood the electronic­s, then another student from the graphic-design programme, a student from the robotics programme to build the remote control, and then I hired a graduate from the welding programme.

(8) I don’t teach anymore –

because of budget cuts, they shut my programme down in 2015. Right now I am a tyre salesman for a local tyre distributo­r.

(9) I was rejected four times.

Each time the patent applicatio­n went to DC for them to review it, they would find something that would be similar to something else.

(10) You’re on the phone with the lawyers,

and the cash register is going cha-ching, chaching, cha-ching.

(11) Finally, I told the lawyer,

you know what? This will be the last time. I’m completely out of money. You guys are the profession­als. You should have caught this. Three weeks later I get a call that, hey, you got your patent.

(12) Next to the wedding and children,

I guess that had to be pretty close. When I got the phone call, I bawled like a baby.

(13) Then comes your next stress level:

Okay. You’ve got the patent. Where do you go from here?

(14) Everything has to be right.

We’re going to hire a vet with forklift experience from the local Veterans’ Affairs centre to demonstrat­e it.

(15) In 2015,

I had the chance to audition for Shark Tank. There were 258 entries. They chose the top five. I was eighth. And my invention isn’t clothing or children’s toys. Mine’s a $30 000 piece of equipment. To get that high on the list told me, ‘You’ve got this. There’s enough interest out there that you just take it and run with it.’

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