Why would it be necessary to 'call an engineer'. If the technology defeats
someone who can use a PC to access newsgroups one would think they would
realise that the Dyson could be taken to the shop - or to a repair shop - in
the back of the car.
--
Regards
John
"Martin Angove" wrote in message
...
In message ,
"Bob Mannix" wrote:
"Peter Hemmings" wrote in message
news
I Have an old Hoover Aquajet and am getting tired of continually
replacing
the "wafer thin" bags which are now sold as spares, and I will be
looking
for a basic "cyclone" upright in the near future. I understand there
are
now more options now than just Dyson, and as I have heard of some bad
reports of them (expensive parts/unreliability), I would appreciate
some
actual user feedback.
For information, I had an interesting conversation with the owner of a
repair shop in Bristol. He said most cyclone problems were due to not
cleaning the filter every couple of months and trying to use the
machine
with a wet filter after cleaning! He also suggested getting a spare
filter
so that I could usr the vacumm while the filter dried out completely
(which can take a few days).
These are not suggestions, they are essential. Two months - ha! I have
to
change the filter every time I empty the machine (Dyson). As they are
now
washable, you just need two sets as the man says.
We started having to do that, which was odd as it was about 4 months
before the filter needed its first clean. We also noticed that the
machine (DC07) had a noticeably weaker "suck". Eventually we called the
engineer (the machine was about 14 months old) and he diagnosed seals
gone and a blockage in the cyclone unit.
Free of charge new cyclone unit, new clear bin, new filter housing and
new filter. The difference is dramatic. Suction back to levels we
thought were just our imaginings, and haven't had to clean the filter
since April, though looking at it now it must be getting near to wash
time.
If your machine is still under two years old, I'd seriously suggest
calling in the engineer. You might be surprised.
Hwyl!
Martin.
--
Martin Angove (it's Cornish for "Smith") - ARM/Digital SA110 RPC
See the Aber Valley -- http://www.tridwr.demon.co.uk/abervalley.html
... 1st we shoot all the lawyers, 2nd we strangle them, 3rd..
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