Dyson Piston

VacuumLand – Vintage & Modern Vacuum Enthusiasts

Help Support VacuumLand:

The dupe competition have kept this old format afloat, which is working in Dyson's favour. They polish up the old version a bit and keep it on top. It's old technology though to me, so I've little interest in it.

And those three article reviews are all cookie cutter sponsored-like reviews. No real details, just regurgitating the marketing, and drawing conclusions from poor 'testing'. They slip in the odd opinion which reveals idiocy (the lack of flat front edge), as I'll reveal in my review. Not worth people's time as people come away with a half truth which could have been summarised in a single short paragraph.
1) Okay.
2) Told ya!
 
And here's the second big review: https://www.trustedreviews.com/reviews/dyson-v16-piston-animal

Trusted Review posted, and their V16 apparently doesn't have the mistake that halves the max power consumption as "optimization", the same problem that made us fear the V16. @Vacuum Facts will dismiss this particular review for understandable and obvious reasons, so I'll just...

Note that the Boost mode is claimed to be 315AW. 900 W motor wrongly optimized to 450 W would gimp it down to no more than 160AW (in Boost mode, DAMMIT!)
Trusted reviews says though that Shark Power detect creates 314Aw while it has a 380W motor. So a bit odd, wonder how they measured it since Shark doesn't specify AW anywhere.

And like I said before, they also show that Shark power detect apparently cleans carpets better than Gen5.

Don't know where they got 401Aw on Piston though.
 
Trusted reviews says though that Shark Power detect creates 314Aw while it has a 380W motor. So a bit odd, wonder how they measured it since Shark doesn't specify AW anywhere.

And like I said before, they also show that Shark power detect apparently cleans carpets better than Gen5.

Don't know where they got 401Aw on Piston though.
It's just their testing process. Different from even the labs.

Either way, 900W (450W when gimped, like some have to complain) with 35% efficiency, giving 315AW in Boost mode, does sound powerful.

I think I remember when I asked about the suction power of Gen5 outside of the Boost mode, but so far I could only make educated guess-timate: 28AW Eco, and 55AW Med (Auto). RIP community.dyson.com
 
It's just their testing process. Different from even the labs.

Either way, 900W (450W when gimped, like some have to complain) with 35% efficiency, giving 315AW in Boost mode, does sound powerful.

I think I remember when I asked about the suction power of Gen5 outside of the Boost mode, but so far I could only make educated guess-timate: 28AW Eco, and 55AW Med (Auto). RIP community.dyson.com
@shattered I think I can guess the suction of V16!
- Boost: 315AW (the official claim)
- Boost (broken design): ~160AW (900W down to 450W)
- Med: ~70AW (look at the test AW and the claimed improvement over Gen5)
- Med (broken design): <50AW (when mistaken, V16 do worse than Dreame Z30 Auto mode, but when fixed the V16 is far superior)
- Eco: ~32AW (again, based on test and claimed improvement)

In comparison, Gen5 is likely 28AW Eco, 55AW normal Medium, and finally the claimed 280AW on Boost mode.
 
Now that issues are correctable (that they're going to get criticised for), I'm actually really enjoying the V16. I'm really starting to appreciate the power consumption optimisations. I used to get about 23 minutes in auto with the Gen5, which was enough for me, but now I get over 40 minutes. This is way more than the extra battery capacity they added, and is mostly from the power optimisations. Less is more afterall. The new technologies are great. The unswept line in the middle, while not ideal, is actually not something that affects performance significantly, and in fact acts as a guideline for the next overlapping pass.
 
You're progressing as much as the previous 4 generations of that cleaner, all dupes which are near market dominant, and only slightly more than with a wider head if you're cleaning properly with it and understanding how to get the best deep clean without much additional time or effort. A wider head doesn't mean a better clean either. If you're so bent on saving time at the expense of everything else, only push it forward like a wheelbarrow and skip the back pull.
 
You're progressing as much as the previous 4 generations of that cleaner, all dupes which are near market dominant, and only slightly more than with a wider head if you're cleaning properly with it and understanding how to get the best deep clean without much additional time or effort.
I'll that that as a 'yes'. That's gotta take a while to clean any moderately sized space at that rate.
 
You're progressing as much as the previous 4 generations of that cleaner, all dupes which are near market dominant
V16 <- Gen5 <- V12/V15 <- V11 <- V10

But Dyson's superior handstick form factor dates back to DC35, so should be... <- V10 <- V7/V8 <- V6 <- DC35. That's 7 generations, if you make the lineage continuous!
and only slightly more than with a wider head if you're cleaning properly with it and understanding how to get the best deep clean without much additional time or effort. A wider head doesn't mean a better clean either. If you're so bent on saving time at the expense of everything else, only push it forward like a wheelbarrow and skip the back pull.
That kinda explains why no normal-sized Dyson cordless has the XL roller heads. The Outsize models (from V11 and Gen5) have the XL heads because they're meant to be used as cordless uprights that has the shape of handhelds, owing to them being larger versions of the normal-sized flagships of their respective time.

Also, if you clean method(olog)ically, you get the best clean. Simple, as @Vacuum Facts recommended.
Now that issues are correctable (that they're going to get criticised for), I'm actually really enjoying the V16. I'm really starting to appreciate the power consumption optimisations. I used to get about 23 minutes in auto with the Gen5, which was enough for me, but now I get over 40 minutes. This is way more than the extra battery capacity they added, and is mostly from the power optimisations. Less is more afterall. The new technologies are great. The unswept line in the middle, while not ideal, is actually not something that affects performance significantly, and in fact acts as a guideline for the next overlapping pass.
1) I told y'all V16 is amazing when the issues are fixed. @Vacuum Facts 👍🏻
2) I see the V-shaped front of the new dual-cone head (which is normal-sized, not XL, if you were asking) as more of an issue than the little unswept path. This is because of the edge cleaning, particularly on carpets, as it means the frontal cleaning is even worse than the previous head (XL or not), especially at the sides, forcing us to use the edges of the new head to clean the edge. Also, since @Vacuum Facts chose to call the soft roller as redundant because of the gates in the main heads - both old and new - when in fact said front of each snowploughs some of the biggest of messes (I don't mean the whole big mess test though, partly because it's not representative) even with the front gate opened all the way. So instead of adapting the normal soft roller for the V16, why not adapt the Vis Nav's multi-action roller into a separate head for the V16 itself, complete with a(n even) brighter version of the same old laser from said normal soft roller? That why, the dual-cone head would serve as the main brush bar roller, while the Vis Nav multi-action bar would become the soft roller instead. Sounds like a V11 to me, only because Dyson chose to go through with only the main head, hence why the soft roller looked like the afterthought compared to the perpetually de-tangling dual-cone head we got.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top