Kid Lovebeach
Well-Known Member
YEAH! AIRBLADE!
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Plus one!
YEAH! AIRBLADE!
dyson is good at marketing.. not design.
i thought the hoover was good, non?
the orange dyson he sold in japan or wherever in the eighties looked better. granted its not a wheel, or sliced bread. i do like the idea of improving on stuff through some sort of lateral thinking. most companies would happily massivley churn out identikit bag based ones for all time if dyson hadnt been so good at marketing. pre-dyson the main thing that sold a hoover was how big motor they could fit in into it. now they have to actually look at the rest of the thing and sort that out.
granted its not a wheel, or sliced bread.
This introduction of disposable bags was seen as an innovation by the market because people wanted to do away with the inconvenience of manual emptying of the cleaner - one of the very things that the dyson cleaner changes
wikipedia said:D'Ascanio, who hated motorbikes, designed a revolutionary vehicle. It was built on a spar-frame with a handlebar gear change, and the engine mounted directly on to the rear wheel. The front protection "shield" kept the rider dry and clean in comparison to the open front end on motorcycles. The pass-through leg area design was geared towards all user groups, including women, as wearing dresses or skirts made riding a motorcycle a challenge. The front fork, like an aircraft's landing gear, allowed for easy wheel changing. The internal mesh transmission eliminated the standard motorcycle chain, a source of oil, dirt, and aesthetic misery. This basic design allowed a series of features to be deployed on the frame, which would later allow quick development of new models.
However, D'Ascanio had a falling-out with Innocenti, who rather than a molded and beaten spar-frame wanted to produce his Innocenti frame from rolled tubing, thereby allowing him to revive both parts of his pre-War company. D'Ascanio disassociated himself with Innocenti, and took his design to Enrico Piaggio to produce the spar-framed Vespa from 1946.[2] Innocenti, after overcoming design difficulties and later production difficulties through his choice of a tubular frame, went on to produce the more costly Lambretta line of motorscooters
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