When was the vacuum cleaner made




















He later went on to offer a horse-drawn vacuum system that featured door-to door service in St. Later, on August 30, a British engineer by the name of Hubert Cecil Booth patented a motorized vacuum that took the form of a large, horse-drawn, petrol-driven unit that was parked outside each building that fed long hoses through the windows.

There have been other American inventors that have introduced variations of the cleaning-by-suction type of vacuuming contraptions. Corinne Dufour invented a machine that sucked dust and dirt into a wet sponge, while David Kenny designed a very large machine that was to be installed in a cellar and connected to a grouping of pipes that lead to each room of a house.

Those all seem pretty noisy and smelly to us! Not exactly our idea of successful vacuuming, by far! Thank goodness Thurman made house calls. The inventor took out ads in the St. Various people tried to improve on Thurman's patent with limited success.

One story goes that an unnamed inventor in London was at a trade show, boasting that his particular gas-powered carpet cleaner was the latest and greatest, when he was approached by the English structural engineer Hubert Cecil Booth. According to a article Booth wrote about this incident many years after the fact, the inventor was apoplectic when Booth questioned him as to why the machine didn't suck in dust rather than expel it.

Booth knew better. An accomplished engineer for the British Royal Navy, he essentially reverse engineered Thurman's patent and came up with the " Puffing Billy.

The contraption became a common sight around town, its pipes snaking from Booth's machine into big buildings. The Puffing Billy secured high-profile jobs. The royal couple were so impressed that they purchased Booth machines for Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle.

By the turn of the century, Booth's device wasn't just riding around on the streets. It was being built right into the homes of the wealthy, creating the central vacuum. That was exactly the problem. Due to expense and size, vacuums were limited to the upper crust of society.

In , an Ohio janitor changed that. It isn't correct to say that James Murray Spangler invented the vacuum, but he certainly revolutionized it. A year-old department store janitor in Canton, Ohio, Spangler's cleaned the entire building each night, a task that was not only long and tedious but also took its toll on his asthma. A tinkerer and inventor, he devised his own Frankenstein contraption using a broom, a pillowcase, and an electric motor.

What made Spangler's machine different, Gask says, was that it was upright and portable. No one was able to get the carpet that clean because they didn't have a motor driven brush. The crude machine worked well, sucking dirt and blowing it out the back into the attached pillowcase. Spangler patented it in and quit his job, opening the Electric Suction Sweeper Company.

Investors including the department store owners helped him to begin production on his invention. It wasn't enough. After buying 75 motors and obtaining factory space, Spangler was so strapped for cash that he used his house as collateral. Says Gasko, "Not only had he defaulted—they were actually coming to take his home away from him, lock the doors of his house and put it up for auction. Susan Hoover's husband was William Hoover, who was already a well-known leather goods manufacturer.

Despite initial misgivings, Hoover purchased the patent from Spangler in Pouring money into marketing, research and development, and door-to-door salesmen, Hoover was the one who turned Spangler's invention into a business success.

More than a century later, everyone knows the name Hoover. The company does millions in sales. Air-Way also created the first 2-motor upright vacuum as well as the first "power nozzle" vacuum cleaner.

Air-Way was the first to use a seal on the dirt bag and first to use a HEPA filter on a vacuum cleaner, according to the company's website. Inventor James Dyson invented the G-force Vacuum cleaner in It was the first bagless dual cyclone machine. After failing to sell his invention to manufacturers, Dyson created his own company and began marketing the Dyson Dual Cyclone, which quickly became the fastest-selling vacuum cleaner ever made in the UK.

Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Use precise geolocation data. Select personalised content. Create a personalised content profile. Measure ad performance. Select basic ads. Create a personalised ads profile. Select personalised ads. Apply market research to generate audience insights. Measure content performance.

Develop and improve products. List of Partners vendors. Share Flipboard Email. Mary Bellis. Inventions Expert. Updated January 13, Featured Video. Cite this Article Format.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000