Week of 17 August, 2008 - 00:00 to 23 August, 2008 - 23:59
How the Checkpoint Flyer Laptop Briefcase Works
The Checkpoint Flyer consists of two elements: the laptop case (a modified Archetype) and the main bag. The two elements are attached at their bottom edges with two
"Gatekeeper" clips, which are basically oblong plastic carabiners. Gatekeepers are made of tough nylon and securely hold the two elements together, yet they can be opened to allow
you to change to a different size of laptop compartment should you aquire a new laptop - you can also detach the two elements and use them separately.

Above: This is how the Checkpoint Flyer should look when it's prepared to go through the x-ray machine. Takes about 3 seconds. The two Gatekeepers also act as a hinge so that the laptop compartment can swing away from the rest of the bag when you lay the whole affair down onto the conveyor belt at the checkpoint. This allows the laptop element to be clearly seen by TSA personnel as the bag passes through the ray machine. Both the laptop element and the main bag have Poron-padded handles: when the Checkpoint Flyer is folded up for carrying, the handle of the laptop element pops through a slot in the top of the flap of the main bag. Though you can carry the Checkpoint Flyer by either the laptop compartment's handle or the main bag's handle, we recommend that you carry it by both handles when carried as a briefcase; it's more comfortable and secure that way. The exterior flap should be buckled down in any event, especially should you choose to carry the bag with Absolute Shoulder Strap as a shoulder bag. To expedite your passage through the checkpoint, as you approach the checkpoint, hold the Checkpoint Flyer's handles in one hand while unsnapping the front flap's buckles with the other hand. At the conveyor belt, lay the Checkpoint flyer on its back, lift and unfold the flap in in the obvious direction and the laptop compartment in the other direction; then flop the flap back to its original position. Takes less time to do than to say it -- think 3 seconds or so. It's sort of like unwrapping a burritio to add some salsa to it, but only wrapping it half-way back up again. Reverse the proceedure at the end of the conveyor belt. Don't forget to put your shoes back on!

Above: This is how the Checkpoint Flyer should look when it's prepared to go through the x-ray machine. Takes about 3 seconds. The two Gatekeepers also act as a hinge so that the laptop compartment can swing away from the rest of the bag when you lay the whole affair down onto the conveyor belt at the checkpoint. This allows the laptop element to be clearly seen by TSA personnel as the bag passes through the ray machine. Both the laptop element and the main bag have Poron-padded handles: when the Checkpoint Flyer is folded up for carrying, the handle of the laptop element pops through a slot in the top of the flap of the main bag. Though you can carry the Checkpoint Flyer by either the laptop compartment's handle or the main bag's handle, we recommend that you carry it by both handles when carried as a briefcase; it's more comfortable and secure that way. The exterior flap should be buckled down in any event, especially should you choose to carry the bag with Absolute Shoulder Strap as a shoulder bag. To expedite your passage through the checkpoint, as you approach the checkpoint, hold the Checkpoint Flyer's handles in one hand while unsnapping the front flap's buckles with the other hand. At the conveyor belt, lay the Checkpoint flyer on its back, lift and unfold the flap in in the obvious direction and the laptop compartment in the other direction; then flop the flap back to its original position. Takes less time to do than to say it -- think 3 seconds or so. It's sort of like unwrapping a burritio to add some salsa to it, but only wrapping it half-way back up again. Reverse the proceedure at the end of the conveyor belt. Don't forget to put your shoes back on!
darcy | 19 August 2008 5:03 pm | New products |
New pictures of the Checkpoint Flyer "checkpoint friendly" Laptop Briefcase

The above picture shows the three layers of the Checkpoint Flyer laid out: the laptop compartment (zipped open to show the laptop for this picture), main compartment with front pockets, and flap compartment.

With the Absolute Shoulder Strap.

Another view of the three layers, this time secured and ready for use as a briefcase.
darcy | 19 August 2008 3:28 pm | New products |
Picture: The Checkpoint Flyer Logo

Why the airplane logo? "My father was a Pan Am pilot: I was flying before my earliest memories. Designing the Checkpoint Flyer was at once a glimpse into the future and a blast from the past" -- Tom

darcy | 19 August 2008 1:30 pm | Our company |
Introducing the Checkpoint Flyer Briefcase by TOM BIHN: A "Checkpoint Friendly" Laptop Bag
SEATTLE, WA -- August 18th, 2008
TOM BIHN, a designer, manufacturer,
and retailer of laptop bags, backpacks, messenger bags, and briefcases,
has introduced the Checkpoint Flyer Laptop Briefcase, a new "checkpoint friendly" briefcase-style
laptop bag with a highly protective compartment for a laptop computer.
The Checkpoint Flyer Laptop Briefcase is Tom Bihn's answer to an intensive, five-month design challenge issued by the TSA
(Transportation Security Administration) to design a laptop bag that meets its newly
implemented "checkpoint friendly" program guidelines. The Checkpoint Flyer Laptop Briefcase
provides the TSA with a clear, unobstructed x-ray view of the laptop in the bag
without sacrificing organizational pockets and clean design.
Unique features of the Checkpoint Flyer Laptop Briefcase include:
darcy | 18 August 2008 9:07 am | Our company |


