![]() ![]() oz.) refillable toothpaste container in its silicone handle. You’re good to go for a month of traveling, without worrying about toothpaste or sterilization, with its built-in 30ml (1 fl. The Nest Brush patent-pending toothpaste delivery system does not need electricity or a battery to dispense the toothpaste. After you’re done brushing and cleaning the Nest Brush off, it gets placed in the UV-C stand where the UV light is supposed to kill the germs and bacteria left behind from rinsing the toothbrush off. The UV-C portion of the whole package is in the stand. The head of the Nest Brush is silicone, something I’ve never used before in a toothbrush, but I am curious to know how well it works. The company says the self-dispensing portion of the toothbrush will dispense the correct portion and last for one month. These added technologies aren’t extremely new, but the way Nest Brush puts the whole packages together is intriguing. Now, Nest Brush is bringing a few more tricks to its toothbrush in the form of a self-dispensing module and UV-C light. ![]() ![]() Even toothbrush bristles have gone from nylon to silicone. Electric toothbrushes have been around for a long time now, and that technology has morphed from simple electric movement to sonic movement. Toothbrush technology has been all over the place for many years. ![]()
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