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Trilobite


Joined: Nov 7, 2007
Points: 121

The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Original Message   Mar 23, 2008 10:12 pm

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First upright from Miele

29 February 2008

This summer, Miele will launch its first range of upright vacuum cleaners – the S7.

 It will consist of about six models, all of which feature ultra large dust bags and

 “a unique swivel body, which makes it easy to manoeuvre in even the trickiest

 of room layouts”. According to the company,  the decision was made following

 numerous requests from customers that wanted to buy Miele  but would only use

 an upright model.

Text: courtesy ERTweekly.com

Picture: courtesy Miele.co.uk, 2009

Edited 21st March 2009; reason: loss of original image.

This message was modified Mar 20, 2009 by Trilobite
Replies: 156 - 165 of 494Next page of topicsPreviousNextNext page of topicsAllView as Outline
Venson


Joined: Jul 23, 2007
Points: 1900

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #156   Oct 13, 2008 6:41 pm
Hi everybody,

For those interested, Miele UK has put a a new page re the S7 -- linkis here: http://www.miele.co.uk/products/S7hub.aspx

This next link is regard to the tests Miele claims to have done re the S7: http://www.miele.co.uk/products/S7Testing.aspx

Best,

Venson

This message was modified Oct 13, 2008 by Venson
DysonInventsBig


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

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #157   Oct 13, 2008 8:29 pm
CarmineD wrote:
DIB:

Faith allows us to believe when reason tells us we shouldn't.  Like you with dyson [and its infamous shroud].  

I find your enthusiam for copying dyson's shroud misdirected.  Brands and models with an MSRP of one-fourth and one-half the MSRP [HOOVER Whisper for $119 and BISSELL HEALTHY HOME for $249 to mention 2 of the of the bagless brands]  copy the shroud of a dyson DC15 [with an MSRP of $499.]   This is a testament to the less expensive brands not to a dyson and a DC15. 

Vacuum consumers don't care who is first.  The one who can copy the best and sell it for less wins in the market place.  It's more about economics than it is about science.

Carmine D.


Carmine,
Famous shrouds not infamous shrouds...
My guess is 100 million Dyson or Dyson knocked off shrouds have or will soon be manufactured since these shrouds were invented at Dyson or by his prior company.

When you cheerlead and support knock-off artists you support the lazy.  Dyson pours money into R&D and knock-off artists do not.  Are consumers better off and the consumers standard of living better off when no new innovations come forth?

Knock off artist and the lazy vacuum manufacturers have and always will be with us and it shows.  Their belief in antiquated products have been nothing short of a gift to the innovative...  to Mr. Dyson.  Lazy manufacturers simply give Dyson the right to print money.

DIB


CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #158   Oct 14, 2008 7:22 am
DysonInventsBig wrote:
Are consumers better off and the consumers standard of living better off when no new innovations come forth?


DIB



Let me answer the question.  It's a good one. 

The benefit of science for every day consumers is the application of new technology [innovation] to make life easier and better: i.e higher standard of living.   [We can argue whether improving the standard of living is better since it makes people LAZY just as we can who was first to market with a shroud (Filter Queen/dyson).  But let's assume for talking purposes that increasing the living standard for society is better in this case].  If the majority of people can't afford the technology, what is the impact on society except as scientific theory?  If the technology is made affordable and practical [economics] and consumers embrace it, then you have a higher standard of living and progress. 

Now, are $400 plus for a household vacuum beyond most persons' family budgets, especially now?  How about $100-$250?  What's more affordable?  The latter, of course.  So, less expensive copies make products more affordable to everyone thereby increasing availability and the standard of living [progress].  It's' not who does it first, but who copies best and sells for less.  Economics at work in the market place after science leads the way.  Aren't both [Science and Economics] equally important for society to progress?

Carmine D.

This message was modified Oct 14, 2008 by CarmineD
CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #159   Oct 14, 2008 7:52 am
Venson wrote:
Hi everybody,

For those interested, Miele UK has put a a new page re the S7 -- linkis here: http://www.miele.co.uk/products/S7hub.aspx

This next link is regard to the tests Miele claims to have done re the S7: http://www.miele.co.uk/products/S7Testing.aspx

Best,

Venson



Hi Venson:

Very impressive Web and product presentation by MIELE for its S7.  Thank you for posting.   Makes the competition look like high school level/caliber by comparison.  As MIELEsays:  Immer Besser.  Of the five S7 uprights, the 2 most expensive [read deluxe] have headlights.  A new and novel concept in vacuums??

So far, I like what I see, read  and hear.  Still I need to get over to the local MIELE dealer.   I'm a month overdue.  My dear Wife has already started:  You're not getting one!

Carmine D.

This message was modified Oct 14, 2008 by CarmineD
Venson


Joined: Jul 23, 2007
Points: 1900

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #160   Oct 14, 2008 11:02 am
CarmineD wrote:
Hi Venson:

Very impressive Web and product presentation by MIELE for its S7.  Thank you for posting.   Makes the competition look like high school level/caliber by comparison.  As MIELEsays:  Immer Besser.  Of the five S7 uprights, the 2 most expensive [read deluxe] have headlights.  A new and novel concept in vacuums?? . . .

Carmine D.



Hi Carmine,

I was most impressed by the testing videos. They meant more to me than the total of features described.  It's great when a company lays it on the line in that fashion because when they show you something that at least appears concrete and encourages choosing their product.  The inference being, "One of ours will spare you the purchase of several machines over time," the testing videos also led me to a slightly gentler frame of mind regarding Miele's prices.  Though I'm sure there are brands that will last and clean well for less maybe there is real, justifiable  value in a Miele purchase for those who can afford it.

The headlight thing is old as can be.  Hoover and Eureka, among the oldest and most known big market vacuum makers, sold "economy" versions of basically the same upright that was at the top-of-the-line.  This was certainly true of the Hoover Convertible and Eureka's basic upright, already simple machines.  I just could never get a grasp of how a ten-cent light fixture, a little bulb and the two minutes worth of a man-hour could or should effect price all that much.  (But that's why I'm not rich by now.) However Miele did not remove but modified the speed options for the lower three of the S7 series by replacing the electronic adjustment with a rotary dial.

Venson

Trilobite


Joined: Nov 7, 2007
Points: 121

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #161   Oct 14, 2008 7:37 pm
Thanks for the Miele links. I checked a few days ago but didn't notice any change from the previous generic S7 barker advert.
DysonInventsBig


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

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #162   Oct 17, 2008 3:19 pm
CarmineD wrote:
Let me answer the question.  It's a good one. 

The benefit of science for every day consumers is the application of new technology [innovation] to make life easier and better: i.e higher standard of living.   [We can argue whether improving the standard of living is better since it makes people LAZY just as we can who was first to market with a shroud (Filter Queen/dyson).  But let's assume for talking purposes that increasing the living standard for society is better in this case].  If the majority of people can't afford the technology, what is the impact on society except as scientific theory?  If the technology is made affordable and practical [economics] and consumers embrace it, then you have a higher standard of living and progress. 

Now, are $400 plus for a household vacuum beyond most persons' family budgets, especially now?  How about $100-$250?  What's more affordable?  The latter, of course.  So, less expensive copies make products more affordable to everyone thereby increasing availability and the standard of living [progress].  It's' not who does it first, but who copies best and sells for less.  Economics at work in the market place after science leads the way.  Aren't both [Science and Economics] equally important for society to progress?

Carmine D.


Carmine,

We can argue who invented the shroud that is common place today, true.  Although mechanically the Health-More shroud cannot be demonstrated as having Dyson shroud benefits which is necessary and used by the global players today.

The Hoover Fusion (and its rebranding) use more-or-less a scaled down Health-Mor shroud which proves NOT to have Dyson shroud benefits.  The Fusion is demonstrated weekly on HSN and this conical shroud proves (weekly) to be an outright disaster (for user and for filtering).

DIB

Fusion on HSN...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Th0sGJfUVx4




CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #163   Oct 17, 2008 3:55 pm
DysonInventsBig wrote:
Carmine,

The Hoover Fusion (and its rebranding) use more-or-less a scaled down Health-Mor shroud which proves NOT to have Dyson shroud benefits.  The Fusion is demonstrated weekly on HSN and this conical shroud proves (weekly) to be an outright disaster (for user and for filtering).

DIB




Hello DIB:

The mere fact that the FUSION, 3 years after it's launch, still maintains its original MSRP of $119 on HSN, is a testament to its popularity.  Even after Consumer Reports!  BTW, it's time to update with the MACH 3-4-5-6, the FUSION successors.

Recall that Wal*Mart [and Sam's Club] contracted with HOOVER for the FUSION after Wal*Mart and dyson had its falling out.  HOOVER sourced the FUSION to VAX [TTI] to use the HOOVER name.  The FUSION/+ were produced and marketed quickly in the Summer of 2005 for $119.  One of WM's best vacuum sellers of all time. 

Three years after the FUSION, the bagless brands' shrouds have gotten even better while the prices are 1/4 to 1/2 that of dyson.  Consumers get the bagless benefits/technology [as you call it] for less with the knock-offs like the MACH-s, Whisper-s, BISSELL Healthy Home-s, etc.  Dyson gave all the competition enough time to produce less expensive knock-offs and market in all the big box retail stores.  With hard economic times into the foreseeable future, the knock-offs will sell more and dysons won't.  Especially at the big box retail stores with inexperienced store staffs that can't sell the high priced dysons like the expert independent vacuum store owners/operators.

Carmine D.

This message was modified Oct 17, 2008 by CarmineD
DysonInventsBig


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

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #164   Oct 18, 2008 2:59 pm
Carmine,

I’m glad you agree.  The Health-Mor conical shield or screen simply fails compared to the self-cleaning Dyson screen (shroud),

Dyson created an entirely new market (low w/ high efeicency cyclonic) and has since found himself competing against his own technologies (the Dual Cyclone and multi-cyclone).  And as illustrated, (the Fusion) the conical is comical and complete rubbish.

DIB




CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #165   Oct 18, 2008 4:03 pm
DysonInventsBig wrote:
Carmine,

I’m glad you agree.  The Health-Mor conical shield or screen simply fails compared to the self-cleaning Dyson screen (shroud),

Dyson created an entirely new market (low w/ high efeicency cyclonic) and has since found himself competing against his own technologies (the Dual Cyclone and multi-cyclone).  And as illustrated, (the Fusion) the conical is comical and complete rubbish.

DIB


DIB:

Before you pat yourself on the back because I agree with just one of your observations, don't ignore the rest of my post.  The shrouds AND performance of today's bagless upright dyson knock-offs like the VAX, MACH, Whisper and BISSELL Healthy Home are just as good as dyson, IMHO.  These makes/models are considerably less expensive than dysons.   AND the reason these knock-offs are multiplying and selling at all the big box retail stores while dysons are sitting on the shelves collecting dust. 

MIELE on the contrary MAY fare much better than dyson with the new S7 line in big box retail stores.  Why?  What is the high end vacuum bagged competition for MIELE in the bb retail stores?  AND,  MIELE has an established name and rep for vacuums and household appliances.  Consumers know the value of the MIELE brand name.  It sells itself.  MIELE-s don't need an expert vacuum sales person to demo and close the MIELE sale at a big box store, like is the case with a $400 plus dyson.  Typically, MIELE vacuum customers are repeat MIELE buyers and pass down/gift away the old MIELE.  No need for trade-in.  Dyson?  I've not heard the repeat buy stats.  Do you know what they are?

Carmine D.

This message was modified Oct 18, 2008 by CarmineD
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