Vacuum Cleaners Discussions |
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Reply #44 Jun 21, 2009 3:26 pm |
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Hi Carmine, its not that the clutch itself is bad, its the belts that ride on the clutch plate itself, dyson did a lot of R@D on what to use the clutch in but never took into consideration that the belts themselves were the problem[btw these can be fixed] i have taken the clutch apart and put in new belts, Now do you know why the dc17 used a geared tooth belt on the aggresive brush? you know the machine that ate peoples carpets,They just seem to be at a loss in what type of brush and belt system to use, They should take a lesson from what panasonic did in the late 80s early 90s, the mc series uprights were always at the top of the pack as far as reliability and performance. regards MOLE
Hello MOLE: Now add to the already expensive dyson customers' repairs a "pneumatic actuator" "high torque clutch" [rather than just the old run of the mill dyson clutch] and a "powered cam" on dyson's latest DC28. Lot's of luck. Carmine D.
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Reply #45 Jun 22, 2009 7:25 am |
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Hi Carmine, its not that the clutch itself is bad, its the belts that ride on the clutch plate itself, dyson did a lot of R@D on what to use the clutch in but never took into consideration that the belts themselves were the problem[btw these can be fixed] i have taken the clutch apart and put in new belts, Now do you know why the dc17 used a geared tooth belt on the aggresive brush? you know the machine that ate peoples carpets, They just seem to be at a loss in what type of brush and belt system to use, They should take a lesson from what panasonic did in the late 80s early 90s, the mc series uprights were always at the top of the pack as far as reliability and performance. regards MOLE
Hi MOLE:
I understand dyson's DC28 is at the local BEST BUY. $599. After I stop off at the ORECK store, I'll drop by BEST BUY and check out the latest dyson upright. Wondering if the belt on this latest dyson is a customer repair or, like the old run of the mill dyson cluthes, a dealer required repair. Consumer Reports hasn't yet picked up to the dyson belt replacement/repairs in the clutch models for its rankings/ratings. Carmine D.
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mole
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Location: earth
Joined: Sep 30, 2007
Points: 783
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Reply #46 Jun 22, 2009 8:57 am |
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Hi MOLE: I understand dyson's DC28 is at the local BEST BUY. $599. After I stop off at the ORECK store, I'll drop by BEST BUY and check out the latest dyson upright. Carmine D. Almost 6 beans for a department store dyson, Whats the real price? I quess its a good thing though when a customer is looking at machines in that price range they start looking at the indys offerings.
Speaking of which why have not the indys enbraced the dc28 with open arms considering that those wicked,no ethics,scammers are strickly profit motivated?? MOLE
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Reply #48 Jun 22, 2009 2:47 pm |
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Hello Venson, MOLE et al: BEST BUY is not the best buy for DC28 [pardon the pun]. Not at 6 beannies. The sales associate was trying hard to make her very first DC28 sale but not for 6 C notes. She finally recommended that I watch for BB sales and talked up the BB 30 day price match. My feeling is this model will drop in price in the near term when it gathers more dust on it than in it. Impressive rug performer. Probably the best of all dyson's uprights to date. The brush roll is vintage DC17 with the extras, cam and clutch. Not all that heavy at 20.6 pounds unless you set the brush roll for low rug pile. Then the bulk and weight are very obvious. On a positive note, the new dyson height adjustments should serve dyson well for pre-empting the rug damage done by the DC17. The trade off in push/pull weight is the rug cleaning. You get easier hand and arm feel with the medium adjustment. Drop it to low and cleaning improves but the airmuscle kicks in the arm-muscle. 3 months for filter washing cycles on both filters-pre and post according to the sales associate. I didn't verify. Carmine D.
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Venson
Joined: Jul 23, 2007
Points: 1900
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Reply #52 Jun 22, 2009 5:29 pm |
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. . . Compared to the US, not all that many homes have high pile carpet to justify the spend.
Hi MOOseUK, Do you know of any particular reasons why? Price, maintenance, style? For some reason at least for the late '50s on high pile carpeting was considered luxurious in the U.S. Man-made fibers like nylon, etc., made the longer pile wall-to-wall carpeting relatively affordable for just about everyone. Best, Venson
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M00seUK
Joined: Aug 18, 2007
Points: 295
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Reply #53 Jun 22, 2009 5:53 pm |
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Hi MOOseUK,
Do you know of any particular reasons why? Price, maintenance, style? For some reason at least for the late '50s on high pile carpeting was considered luxurious in the U.S. Man-made fibers like nylon, etc., made the longer pile wall-to-wall carpeting relatively affordable for just about everyone.
Best,
Venson Not sure why, I guess just 'the way it is'. It's not to say that people here don't have high pile carpets; our family home used to have this in one room. But my personal experience is that high pile is them norm in the US, at least in the homes I've been in on the west coast.
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