Vacuum Cleaners Discussions |
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mole
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Location: earth
Joined: Sep 30, 2007
Points: 783
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Re: A Halo-like UVC handheld vacuum for your bed...
Reply #6 Jan 15, 2008 9:24 am |
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And here they are...I found three so far but there are probably more. Wonder why Kirby is the machine of choice? Hygienitech, #2, and #3.
This system is sold by pre set appointments,they prey on the germphobics,it's a kirby with a blue u.v light hanging off it.The asking price is 3 thousand dollars and up.
Talk about getting screwed............ MOLE
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DysonInventsBig
Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454
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Re: A Halo-like UVC handheld vacuum for your bed...
Reply #7 Jan 15, 2008 4:07 pm |
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Hi Motorhead and DIB Thanks for the news. To say the least, where there's a will there's a way. Kirby had to agree to licensing for these diverse models didn't it? I wonder if there were limits set. One of the links mentioned the cleaner being self-propelled but did not suggest the use of the vacuum on rugs -- or at least I didn't notice -- just on matresses. The online literature of one even made mention of uniforms and special solutions to use along with the machine. DIB, is the Ray Cop rechargable or corded? Thanks, Venson Venson, Licensing/patenting: The little I know of patents… “Broad patents” typically, not “narrow patents” give inventors the greater protection. Manufactures must pay for patents in whatever country they want protection in (giving them the legal right to sue). regards, DIB
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Trebor
Joined: Jan 16, 2009
Points: 321
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Re: A Halo-like UVC handheld vacuum for your bed...
Reply #8 Jan 17, 2009 9:51 pm |
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The HygeniTech is sold for, (I'm not kidding, I looked into it once) $9,000! They sell it on the premise that they do not charge royalties or franchise fees, and offer free promotional materials. It basically is a Kirby mattress demo. You use a cloth dirt meter, take some of the material collected and test it with a drop of chemical substance. The deeper the color (light pink to deep orange red) the worse the contamination. There is another brand called Allerex, same basic concept. The Kirby is the unit of choice because of power, weight, and power transmission. NOTHING beats a Kirby on a mattress (for cleaning that is). The unit you mention is smaller, and the promotional blurb speaks of a 'vibrating pad' and not a brush roll. The Hygenitech doesn't call it a brushroll, it says the unit cleans with suction and 'high frequency pulsating waves! I sold a lot of Kirbys at that part of the demo. It is referred to as 'closing her on the mattress'
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Re: A Halo-like UVC handheld vacuum for your bed...
Reply #9 Jan 18, 2009 9:00 am |
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NOTHING beats a Kirby on a mattress (for cleaning that is). The unit you mention is smaller, and the promotional blurb speaks of a 'vibrating pad' and not a brush roll. The Hygenitech doesn't call it a brushroll, it says the unit cleans with suction and 'high frequency pulsating waves! I sold a lot of Kirbys at that part of the demo. It is referred to as 'closing her on the mattress' Hi Trebor:
Nice to see/hear that the vacuum industry and its professionals still have a sense of humor. Carmine D.
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Re: A Halo-like UVC handheld vacuum for your bed...
Reply #12 May 17, 2009 7:23 am |
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Looks like the infamous bed bug brigade is back in full force in the USA. http://news.yahoo.com/s/mcclatchy/20090515/sc_mcclatchy/3234191_1 http://health.yahoo.com/sleep-living/bedbugs/healthwise--za1160.html http://search.yahoo.com/search?p=how+to+get+rid+of+bedbugs&fr=fp-today&cs=bz&sado=1 Carmine D.
This message was modified May 17, 2009 by CarmineD
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Venson
Joined: Jul 23, 2007
Points: 1900
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Re: A Halo-like UVC handheld vacuum for your bed...
Reply #15 May 18, 2009 1:35 pm |
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. . . It was thought that DDT ended them in the USA over 50 years ago but a new strain is resistant to DDT. . .
Carmine D.
Hi Carmine, I don't know if the proper term is mutation but it seems to be a problem all round these days. Way, way back --two centuries to be exact -- when I was in junior high a science taught us that when you kill of just about anything from houseflies to bacteria that there will always be x-amount of survivors that will breed a more resistant strain. This is the reason for many of the so-called super-infections acquired during hospital stays. DDT, hexachloriphine, and some antibiotics, etc., were quickly pressed into to use only to be later discovered to not only be bad for germs and vermin but people too. Keeping a tidy house is of course very important but there are those everyday instances of inadvertant susceptibility as we go about our business out there in the world. I can't count the times when I've probably broadcasted my own germs on a crowded subway when I've had to go do a days work when ill. There are lots of coughers, sneezers and carriers around. Venson
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