For nearly a hundred years since its invention, the vacuum cleaner has become an indispensable utility in the housekeeping arsenal. In oriental countries, a broom is used to sweep the house everyday, more as a ritual than as an efficient cleaning tool. On the other hand, western countries adopted the vacuum cleaner designed to dislodge and draw out the tiniest of dust particles/debris from any nook and cranny in the home/office.
The vacuum works just as when you take in a soft drink using a straw; only, the vacuum cleaner functions with greater suction force. When you suck in a soft drink through a straw, you create a low pressure zone in your mouth. This makes the pressure relatively higher on the soft drink inside the can, forcing the soft drink up the straw into your mouth. The tornado (twister) is another example to visualize the force with which the vacuum cleaner aspirates/sucks in air. You must have seen huge objects being sucked up the funnel of a tornado. The end result is the same in a vacuum cleaner.
A traditional/conventional/upright vacuum cleaner is upright with its components assembled in this order: brushes, intake vent, fan blades, cleaning bag and exhaust vent. The brushes are located at the intake vent and rotate at high speed. When the brushes come into contact with a dirty carpet, they dislodge the dust/debris through friction. Next, powerful, high-speed fan blades placed behind the intake vent, suck in this dust/debris with the help of a cleaning bag (a filter, usually located behind the fan blades), which filters the dust/dirt/allergens. The filtered air finally exits the vacuum cleaner through an exhaust vent located behind the cleaning bag.
With technology evolving constantly, lighter, user-friendly, efficient, economical and
location-specific vacuum cleaners of different size and shape are entering the market to give you greater cleaning efficiency and satisfaction.
The vacuum works just as when you take in a soft drink using a straw; only, the vacuum cleaner functions with greater suction force. When you suck in a soft drink through a straw, you create a low pressure zone in your mouth. This makes the pressure relatively higher on the soft drink inside the can, forcing the soft drink up the straw into your mouth. The tornado (twister) is another example to visualize the force with which the vacuum cleaner aspirates/sucks in air. You must have seen huge objects being sucked up the funnel of a tornado. The end result is the same in a vacuum cleaner.
A traditional/conventional/upright vacuum cleaner is upright with its components assembled in this order: brushes, intake vent, fan blades, cleaning bag and exhaust vent. The brushes are located at the intake vent and rotate at high speed. When the brushes come into contact with a dirty carpet, they dislodge the dust/debris through friction. Next, powerful, high-speed fan blades placed behind the intake vent, suck in this dust/debris with the help of a cleaning bag (a filter, usually located behind the fan blades), which filters the dust/dirt/allergens. The filtered air finally exits the vacuum cleaner through an exhaust vent located behind the cleaning bag.
With technology evolving constantly, lighter, user-friendly, efficient, economical and
location-specific vacuum cleaners of different size and shape are entering the market to give you greater cleaning efficiency and satisfaction.
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