Trebor
Joined: Jan 15, 2009
Points: 321
|
|
Re: whatever happened to the Rainbow enthusiasts
Reply #161 Mar 31, 2011 12:43 pm |
|
Mark, The first Hyla had a removable separator that needed cleaning after each use. The newer design is more cylindrical called NST, New Separation Technology. I do not know how the GST (Geyser Separation Technology) differs but it is supposed to create a geyser that washes the air more thoroughly, eliminating any need for addiitonal filtration. The neck for air intake is contained inside the water bucket. It is a bucket, completely open. The air intake is actually submerged under the surface of the water. There is a separate air path for air washing and cleaning. The website has an animation showing this. The Aqua Air is remarkably like the Hyla, with the addition of a variable speed control. The newest Hyla has no bucket clamps, just a bucket handle that serves the same function. The accessories for the Hyla are more numerous, but the Wessel Werk power nozzle is the same. Despite the larger water container, both machines are nearly the same height and width as the Rainbow. There is also the Robot, the Ocean Blue, and the Delphin competing in the separator based water filtration vacuum cleaner market. No idea how they are faring. The Turmix I think became the Ocean Blue. It looks a lot like the former Vac Man, which I think was a reincarnation of the Turmix from Mexico. I had a Hyla, one of the first in the US. I did not keep it because it used the old 10in wessel werk PN with widely spaced soft bristles.
I have always liked cleaning with a water filtration vac, deep cleaning, that is. Quick pickups lasting less the 5 minutes, not so much.
Trebor
|