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The company turns air into water – Tribune East Valley

The company turns air into water – Tribune East Valley

From a factory in northern Scotsdale, which makes “ultra -purification”, the city plans to turn the water flushed with toilets into water with a drinking quality.

Although the process may sound like Magic, a private company says it can lead it.

Forget The Crane Toilets – it’s “air to glasses”.

Kara water claims to have refined what she called “air-water technology”.

Although in his other career as a promoter he is no stranger to hyperbole, Kerry Dunn says that Kara water is 100% true and legal.

By extracting a glass of what seems to be an ordinary water machine, Dun says, “This is something that is science fiction – without the fiction.”

With the movement of the switch, the machine he worked, he said: “He takes clean water outside the air.

“Really crazy things,” he said, with the excitement of a teenager who will play a favorite pop song.

Although only Andy Warhol fan will find this water cooler skilled, says Dunn – he does nothing more than turning on it – “You can remove 10 liters of water from here every day. That’s about 20 bottles of water. “

The so -called “Magic Water Machine” was first declared one of the “Invention of the Year” at Time magazine in 2022, after which he received the CES innovation awards in the last two years.

Scotsdale entrepreneurs and long-standing business partners Dunn and Reed Glick plan even more 2025.

He again works with the inventor of Genius Cody Sodin, the duet of Scottsdale helps to launch Kara sub-the “first of its kind coffee machine”.

It uses this air-water technology to fill the tank used to make coffee.

The soundtrack of this company will have to include “You can do magic,” a hit from the 70s of America.

A visitor to his AirPark office in Scottsdale was surprised to find a conference room with a machine of air-water that you tannica, but with a collection of eye extraction from guitars mounted on a wall.

The glittering guitars are signed by members of the Kansas groups, a foreigner, DOOBIE brothers and other legendary rockers.

What about it?

“Well, we’re in the music business,” said Dunn in an easy way that hardly fits the stereotype of a wild man’s concert. “We are music promoters. We do 300 concerts a year, right? “

At the local level, Dunne’s R Entertainment hosts the annual holiday on July 4th in a nearby Westworld and helps the Open Management Waste Management Phoenix. The company is also 13 years old, ruling and booking the Flgstaff Pepsi Amphitheater and manages Martha Stewart’s 10-grade experience.

So, how does one get from rock shows and events to … “Magic Water”?

“Three years ago,” says Dunn, “I went to the CES show – we have a festival we do, a Baby Boomer Festival called Festival Good Life Festival. This is the best music, the best food, the best wines for baby bubbles. And it was a very successful event.

“And we were exploring the devils of our patrons, and they told us that one of the things they told us was that they were super interested in health.

“So, I went to Ces Show to hire all these crazy health guys.”

He was in the Green Room with Sodin, things were late, so they heard the background:

Sown grew up in a small town in Pennsylvania, where his family drinks from a well in the property. When they could not understand why they had mysterious diseases, they tested their water and found that it was contaminated with dangerously high levels of bacteria.

At that time, Soown studied at college and learned about an African beetle, which survives by capturing moisture in the air of his shell.

With this as an inspiration, Sodin spent years in experiments before finding a device that mimics the water harvesting of the beetle.

“I was fascinated by it too,” Dun recalled. “I thought,” Water from the air. Man, this world needs it. “

Dunn had three words about Sudin: “Register me.”

The two have made a deal to promote and trade the Water Invention, which Sodin now produces in a factory in China.

“And last year,” said Dunn, “When we were on the CES show, he said,” I have a crazy idea: Why don’t we take the same technology and put it in a coffee pot? “

Borrowing from his own technology, Sodin came out with a coffee machine of air-water.

“And this works until we now have 12,000 modern orders on it,” Dun said. “We enter the production next month.”

While Kara’s water machine costs just under $ 5,000, Kara’s coffee machine will sell for $ 599. The company manages a special pre -order of $ 399.

The machines are only available online, although Dunn has said negotiations are being held with retailers for brownish.

Dun has sipped the air-water and affected his career paths.

“In the entertainment industry, we don’t really save the world,” he said.

“But with these things,” said Scottsdale’s husband, lifting his glass with magic fluid, “we know we could influence a lot – we can remove plastic bottles.

“We can get pure drinking water in the world.”

Information: Karapod.com or Karawater.com

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