lelia wrote:
We made an alternative squeeze machine for our daughter. We put two air mattresses inside a sleeping bag and snaked hoses from an, ah shoot, I lost the word, a motor that pushes air, yes, an air compressor to them with a squeeze bulb (specifically a baby snot bulb with a long neck) as the regulator. Our daughter would crawl into the sleeping bag and hold onto the bulb. As long as she squeezed the bulb air would be pushed into the air mattresses. If she let go the bulb, the air mattresses would deflate instantly. She would hold the bulb until she was bright red in the face. One thing we never found a good solution for was the hideous racket the air compressor made.
When I say we, I mean me and a friend after we went to one of Temple's lectures in Anchorage. We drove back to North Pole problem solving all the way (and what a high that was!) and then told her husband who ran an HVAC business what we wanted. We did the sewing and velcro straps and he did the machinery. That was fifteen years ago. After four or five years of use, she didn't want to use it any more, so we dismantled it and gave away the pieces. I can't recall how the mechanical pieces worked. I'm sorry I can't give you more detail, but maybe you can find an HVAC guy who could make something similar for you.
We had hoped to start a business selling this less costly way to provide pressure for autists, but after we factored in the costs of insurance, shipping from Alaska, etc etc it ended up the same price as Temple's plywood squeeze box (which our daughter tried once and really liked).
We live in another state now, so maybe costs would pencil out, but I am not a businessman. So, if somebody want to make a business making squeeze sacks, you are welcome to do so.
This sounds very creative.
I will have to try and design something.
_________________
I = Vegan!
Animals = Friends.