Maurice Ward
Maurice Ward | |
---|---|
Born | 1933 |
Died | 2011 (aged 77–78) |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Inventor and hairdresser |
Spouse | Eileen Ward |
Children | Four daughters |
Website | Maurice Ward |
Maurice Ward was a British
Biography
Maurice Ward worked as a hairdresser during the 1960s, and he took pride in his work. He once said in an interview, "What L'Oreal and Garnier are doing today, I was doing 50 years ago. And they still haven't got it right."[2]
He was a tinkerer and liked to invent things in his spare time. This hobby led to him purchasing an extruder from ICI during the early 1980s.[2]
It was this purchase that led to the invention of the material
He began to try to mix different formulations of heat-resistant, non-toxic plastics, which he casually referred to as "Gubbins." He was highly productive in this, mixing up to 20 formulations a day. Eventually, he produced a formulation that seemed promising, and used the extruder he had bought years before to make it into sheets. He tested it with a blowtorch, and it dissipated the heat perfectly. This is the material that became known as Starlite, so named by his eight-year-old granddaughter because she thought it was a good name.[2]
This invention gained much publicity in the 1990s, after he was featured on the British television series Tomorrow's World, holding a blowtorch directly to an egg that had been coated in Starlite. After five minutes under direct contact with the flame, the egg was cracked open, revealing a completely raw egg inside. The invention worked so well that the egg had not even begun to cook.[1] Ward repeated the demonstration several times on YouTube.[4]
Rafael Silva, CEO of Thermashield, LLC, reported that he became friends with Ward in 2008. Silva stated that, after sharing thoughts and ideas for two years, they agreed to start a business relationship; but shortly before Ward could share his secrets, he died. Two years later, Ward's family contacted Silva and agreed to sell all the rights to Starlite. Thermashield, LLC was formed in 2013 to acquire Starlite's formulations, production processes, original samples, the inventor's notes and other materials.[5]
Ward died in May 2011 aged 78.[1]
References
- ^ a b c Keene, Jamie (17 May 2012). "Starlite: the miracle material that could be lost forever". The Verge. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
- ^ a b c d George, Rose (15 April 2009). "Starlite, the nuclear blast-defying plastic that could change the world". The Daily Telegraph.
- ^ Ward, Maurice (5 March 2009). "Hello One and All". Maurice Ward. Blogger.
- YouTube. 4 March 2009.
- ^ Thermashield, "About", "About", September 2021
External links
- Maurice Ward blog
- Starlite discussed in Skeptoid