How does the zipper slider actually bring two rows of teeth together?
The slider contains a Y-shaped cavity (a wedge) that angles incoming teeth so each tooth can slot into its neighbor's groove; when you pull the tab the wedge aligns parts to interlock, and when you pull down it separates them.
Why are coil zippers more common than traditional toothed zippers?
Coil zippers are made from one continuous plastic spiral, so there are no individual teeth to break; they're flexible, cheaper to produce, and resist cascading failures common to metal-tooth designs.
What causes a zipper to unzip behind the slider and how can you fix it?
That happens when a slider becomes worn or bent and no longer clamps teeth tightly. A common DIY fix is to carefully crimp the slider's sides with pliers to narrow its inner cavity — don't over-crimp or you'll make it worse.
What made Gideon Sundback's design enduring?
Sundback developed precise tooth geometry (nib and scoop) and the specialized machines to cut and stamp teeth at scale in 1914, producing durable, reliable fasteners that set the modern standard.
Why is YKK such a dominant zipper maker?
After patents expired, YKK focused on quality, efficient manufacturing and vertical integration, enabling massive scale and consistent products that overtook competitors like Talon.