Magnetischer Aquarienscheibenreiniger im Einsatz

AQUARIUM GLASS CLEANER

As simple as it is clever

For fish fans, the days of rolling up their sleeves and scrubbing the sides of their fish tanks are long gone: they don’t have to reach deep inside them, but can instead reach for a magnet filled with air.

Cleaner fish do as their name suggests: with their sucking mouths, they eat algae and leftover food, cleaning up aquariums. A simple yet original invention has been competing with these animals for some time: the aquarium glass cleaner from Dutch company Bakker Magnetics was developed and manufactured over 50 years ago under the name Mag-Float. The really clever part: the two magnetic sections, which are attached to the aquarium glass, have a little air inside them. This way, the magnet cannot  accidentally fall to the bottom of the aquarium as it always floats back to the water’s surface. This keeps the glass clean and the owner’s sleeves dry.

Attractive effect

The idea behind the Mag-Float is simple – and at the same time so original that it was copied many times in the early days. Product piracy was especially common at zoo fairs. Today, the Mag-Float is well established in the market. The company has greatly expanded its position in this field by granting licenses, demonstrating how a relatively simple invention can become commercially successful thanks to IP protection.

(Header image: hedgehog94 – AdobeStock.com, detail: boedefeld1969 – AdobeStock.com)

Antennenwels an einer Glasscheibe von unten
A cleaner fish (here a bristlenose catfish) at work

Place of invention

Science Park Eindhoven 5502, 5692 EL Son, Niederlande

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