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  2. William Painter (inventor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Painter_(inventor)

    Painter patented 85 inventions, including the common bottle cap, the bottle opener, a machine for crowning bottles, a paper-folding machine, a safety ejection seat for passenger trains, and also a machine for detecting counterfeit currency. He was inducted to the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2006. [4]

  3. EastwoodCo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EastwoodCo

    The Eastwood Company began in a garage in suburban Philadelphia in 1978, with the founder, Curt Strohacker, selling buffing wheels and compounds from 1/4-page ads in automotive magazines. [2] Today, the company has a distribution and headquarters facility in Pottstown, Pennsylvania , mailing millions of full-color catalogs annually, and running ...

  4. Every Which Way but Loose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Every_Which_Way_but_Loose

    The film opened in 1,275 theatres and grossed $10,272,294 in its first week, beating Eastwood's previous best opener, The Enforcer. [ 7 ] It grossed a total of $104.3 million in the United States and Canada, [ 2 ] over $500 million when adjusted for inflation, [ 8 ] ranking high among those of Eastwood's career, and was the second-highest ...

  5. Crown cork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown_cork

    Opening a crown capped bottle The crown cork (also known as a crown seal , crown cap or just a cap ), the first form of bottle cap , was invented by William Painter in 1892 in Baltimore . The company making it was originally called the Bottle Seal Company, but it changed its name with the almost immediate success of the crown cork to the Crown ...

  6. Bottle opener - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottle_opener

    Under most use, a bottle opener functions as a second-class lever: the fulcrum is the far end of the bottle opener, placed on the top of the crown, with the output at the near end of the bottle opener, on the crown edge, between the fulcrum and the hand: in these cases, one pushes up on the lever.

  7. Beverage opener - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beverage_opener

    A beverage opener (also known as a multi-opener) is a device used to open beverage cans, plastic bottles or glass bottles, which are the three most common beverage containers. [ 1 ] Types

  8. P-38 can opener - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P-38_can_opener

    A Vietnam War-era P-38 can opener, with a U.S. penny shown for size comparison.. The P-38 (larger variant known as the P-51) is a small can opener that was issued with canned United States military rations from its introduction in 1942 to the end of canned ration issuance in the 1980s. [1]

  9. Corkscrew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corkscrew

    As the worm is twisted into the cork, the levers are raised. Pushing down the levers draws the cork from the bottle in one smooth motion. The most common design has a rack and pinion connecting the levers to the body. The head of the central shaft is frequently modified to form a bottle opener, or foil cutter, increasing the utility of the ...