Thoughts on the Dyson DC25.

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Sounds like you're desperate for him to say that the DC41 cleans better. Why don't you ask Dyson for the test results data of the pick on the DC41 to confirm?
 
Super sweeper


 


When we first got the dc 14 to sell I did drop a brand new one off the mezzanine ( a standard story high )  in my workshop, The cleaner head bent upwards from the impact and the two plastic sir clips shot off ( one yet to be found) but a few minutes of disassembling and it worked perfect again.


 


A year ago I knocked off ( buy accident )a traded in Ultimate G  , It hit the ground like a tank, Bits shot off in every direction, The wheels broke, the cleaner head mounts and lever broke off, The chassis cracked the head light unit got hit by the cleaner head and it bent and broke.  


 


Does this make the Kirby a weakly built machine. No not at all but it goes to show how unfair doing that test with these two machines would be.


 


A kirby ways a ton and its own weight was its biggest failure in this instance. It meant the machine hit the ground with more force putting greater force on the parts. Cast aluminium is very strong for every day bumps and knocks but it has no give to it. Hot it too hard and it will break. Why do you think modern car bumpers are made from plastic, It can absorb light dings and dents.


 


For a throwing off the roof test to be fair you would need to similar weighted machines again made out of similar materials.


 


Just out of interest the Kirby also smashed out a fist size chunk out of the concreate floor it hit so hard. My Two technicians almost jumped out of their skin 
 
Sounds scary, Gareth. I dare you to drop one of the newer, cheaper Dysons 
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!


 


The Ultimate G is a tank. I wouldn't use it for testing and I honestly wouldn't use it daily in my house.


 


Perhaps the being-mowed-down-by-a-Plymouth-Fury-at-40-miles-an-hour test will be more fair, we'll see.
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I wouldn't want to do that to a Plymouth fury you might scrape the paint or something.


 


I was doing some training  with some stores and threw a dc37 down a flight of concrete stairs , scratched a bit but not broken at all. 
 
I don't really think that you will see dc25's in daily use in 20 years time

because the cleaner head motor goes
 
Heres one--How 'bout the RL trash truck crush test!!!Bet NO vacuum made would pass that-esp if you put the vacuum under the edge of the packer blade and lowered it!On the "Classic Refuse Trucks" videos they show some sadly vacuums being crushed in trash trucks-one video showed a bagless Eureka upright getting crushed several times in a SL trash truck.I think THAT wld be the untimate toughness test!If any vacuum cleaner can withstand those tests I would buy it!
 
How about a fire test? a DC25 overdrive passed that successfully twice! Then got smashed up with some perseverance
 
You're telling me somebody set a Dyson on fire, and it survived, nonsense. Plastic melts, and fire causes melting. it's like saying ice doesn't melt when you throw it in a science oven. The Dyson would've smoked, and emit a crap-ton of pollution.
 

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