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Acerone


Joined: Jul 25, 2007
Points: 986

Dyson AirBlade
Original Message   Dec 12, 2007 5:44 am
Saw the Dyson Airblade commercial for the first time last night. Anyone else seen it yet?
Replies: 1 - 10 of 58NextNext page of topicsAllView as Outline
DysonInventsBig


Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #1   Dec 12, 2007 6:52 am
Acerone,

I have this commercial online here.  Enjoy.        DIB

P.S.  "It was awesome.  I loved it."  ... are two comments from someone who told me of using the Airblade.

This message was modified Dec 17, 2007 by DysonInventsBig



Acerone


Joined: Jul 25, 2007
Points: 986

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #2   Dec 12, 2007 2:53 pm
Thanks for the link DysonInventsBig. Any idea if Dyson came out with the DC17 commercial yet?
Acerone


Joined: Jul 25, 2007
Points: 986

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #3   Mar 5, 2008 7:08 am
CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #4   Mar 5, 2008 7:25 am
Hello Ace:

This is old my man.  June 2007.  Where's it been?  NYC just added a bunch of public restrooms, plan to add more, and other cities are following suit.  The airblade didn't get the nod.

Couple of notes on the old article:  It appears the users are women.  A point raised by a gent on one of the Vacuum Forums is that the small airblade drying well would pose a problem for men with hairy man arms.  Recall: I believe it was Gandalf who did.

Second:  The unsanitary water/mess left on and around the airblade. Takes a custodian to monitor and clean.  Labor costs.

Rubbermaid recently entered the bathroom washroom industry by acquiring a company well intrenched in non-touch and sanitary bathroom devices.  Seems it has the hold on the market despite dyson's entrance in September 2006 with the airblade.  More common are the touchless paper towels that push out a towel from the the motion of hands.  Sure it uses trees for the paper.  But in a the current housing market with no wood beingh harvested for new home building and/or aluminum studs for frames, what else should be done with these trees?  No, not newsapers.  Most get news on-line and TV.  Paper towels!

Carmine D.

MrApollinax


Joined: Feb 18, 2008
Points: 13

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #5   Mar 5, 2008 9:57 am
I do a lot of travel for work and I've seen them in quite a few airport restrooms.
CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #6   Mar 5, 2008 12:52 pm
MrApollinax wrote:
I do a lot of travel for work and I've seen them in quite a few airport restrooms.



Mr. A:

Are the airblades standalone dryers in the A/P restrooms and/or do they coexist with the conventional hand dryers and paper towels?

Carmine D.

MrApollinax


Joined: Feb 18, 2008
Points: 13

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #7   Mar 5, 2008 1:06 pm
CarmineD wrote:
Mr. A:</p><p>Are the airblades standalone dryers in the A/P restrooms and/or do they coexist with the conventional hand dryers and paper towels?</p><p>Carmine D.

In all the cases that I can recall the airblades have replaced the conventional hand driers. However every airport restroom I have ever been in has paper towels available regardless of the paperless hand drying system being used.
Acerone


Joined: Jul 25, 2007
Points: 986

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #8   Mar 5, 2008 1:31 pm
CarmineD wrote:
Hello Ace:</p><p>This is old my man.  June 2007.  Where's it been?  NYC just added a bunch of public restrooms, plan to add more, and other cities are following suit.  The airblade didn't get the nod.</p><p>Couple of notes on the old article:  It appears the users are women.  A point raised by a gent on one of the Vacuum Forums is that the small airblade drying well would pose a problem for men with hairy man arms.  Recall: I believe it was Gandalf who did.</p><p>Second:  The unsanitary water/mess left on and around the airblade. Takes a custodian to monitor and clean.  Labor costs.</p><p>Rubbermaid recently entered the bathroom washroom industry by acquiring a company well intrenched in non-touch and sanitary bathroom devices.  Seems it has the hold on the market despite dyson's entrance in September 2006 with the airblade.  More common are the touchless paper towels that push out a towel from the the motion of hands.  Sure it uses trees for the paper.  But in a the current housing market with no wood beingh harvested for new home building and/or aluminum studs for frames, what else should be done with these trees?  No, not newsapers.  Most get news on-line and TV.  Paper towels!</p><p>Carmine D.

My bad.... Carry on.... ;-)
DysonInventsBig


Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #9   Mar 6, 2008 11:19 pm
Acerone,

James Dyson was interviewed in Forbes recently and the topic of conversation was his Airblade.  Here.


CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: Dyson AirBlade
Reply #10   Mar 27, 2008 6:47 pm
Here is a synopsis of dyson Airblade [hand dryer] sales according to a reliable source:

Since it's launch in the summer of 2007, total Airblades sold are 100,000

Total sales in dollars:  $140,000

Cost to dyson to produce each unit: $840

Retail price: $1400 {about 3X as much as traditional hand dryers].

It has not taken off as quickly and well as dyson hoped. 

Carmine D.

This message was modified Mar 27, 2008 by CarmineD
Replies: 1 - 10 of 58NextNext page of topicsAllView as Outline
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