Dyson vacuums

People with carpet sound poor . Like serious carpet is not real flooring in my country .

i don't like carpet because it collects dust and all kinds of other nasty shit. once i moved into a place with hardwood floors, i told myself i'd never go back to carpet. on the downside, it can get extremely cold during the winters. but i luckily live in an area where it never gets too cold. and when it's hot out, it stays cooler due to the flooring.
 
Always looking for a good vacuum. Never tried a dyson, just keep buying a mid range ($300) one every few years.

I might have to try a miele like a few are saying. I have a dog and cat and mostly hardwood. still use a vacuum though.
 
On a side note, does anyone here have experiences with a Roomba / robot vacuum? Do they do the job? I've thought about it, I mean if I were to pick between a Dyson and that, and if they're similar, I'd go with the robot... its basically an expensive toy in my eyes.
 
I use to work @ bestbuy. They had a shitload of open Vacuums, the Dyson's never worked.


Im not sure if it was because the Dyson's they had opened were broken to begin with but I went to multiple stores and they never worked. If they did work, the suction wasn't the best.


The best Vacuums were always always the old school one's like these ones.

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The Cleaning Crew always used the old school ones....So yeah I think they even thought they were better, they were usually older people tho, maybe they like old school? Also the old school ones had a huge cord so maybe thats why they liked it as well.


So yeah, I think Dyson is pure hype.
 
i don't like carpet because it collects dust and all kinds of other nasty shit. once i moved into a place with hardwood floors, i told myself i'd never go back to carpet. on the downside, it can get extremely cold during the winters. but i luckily live in an area where it never gets too cold. and when it's hot out, it stays cooler due to the flooring.
Heated floors is standard in every korean home - even the poverty sound poor ones . Flooring in western countries is definately different and carpet is just appalingly poor and nasty to asians who are very particular about dust and dirty floors .

Another thing which is very different is using an elevator to move . It along with carpet seems so dated and poorly engineered . In korea windows come standard as opening patio doors and your stuff is loaded onto a pallet and raised to your apartment and you move it in through your window . Imagine seeing it so outdated in north america watching people cram their stuff into an elevator and moving down the halls in multiple trips and then trying to cram matresses and couches through the front door without scratching the door frame and walls . Some things you guys are very behind in and carpet just happens to be just one of those things . Its like ancient arab invention , thats how cutting edge it is . Lets just admit its poor and backward .
 
Is this the NV22L, NV351, or NV352?
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I have a Shark Navigator.

Costs less and works great on hardwood /laminate floors.

Dyson is overpriced and heavily marketed, IMO.

Edit: just read about the shedding dog. I, too, have a dog that sheds (husky.) This Shark works great for that. That's actually why I bought it, in fact.
 
On a side note, does anyone here have experiences with a Roomba / robot vacuum? Do they do the job? I've thought about it, I mean if I were to pick between a Dyson and that, and if they're similar, I'd go with the robot... its basically an expensive toy in my eyes.
azntrojan. Or just check amazon reviews.
 
I got one of their fans from mileage points that were about to expire. It looks cool but doesn't work as good as a regular fan.
 
I used to think it was all marketing until I used my sister's DC39.

Of all the vacuums I have used, this one has the best suction. Much better than the 5 gallon wet-dry vacuums from the big-box home improvement stores.
 
People make it sound like changing out a filter or bag is a nightmare.
Just do it and move on.

If you really want to spend $500 on a vacuum, go buy a commercial one or even a wet vac. $500 is nuts for a residential vacuum.
 
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