I maintain a number of properties. Reliability is key to me. As a rule I like to repair/ refresh rather than dump in a skip and buy another one. I have found Bosch consumer products superb in terms of design, build quality, maintenance and spare parts availability.
A few years ago a beautiful looking 6yr old Dyson fan that cost £300 blew a circuit board. Dyson no longer supported it, so it was scrap. Fans are normally some of the longest living of all electrical products with 1930s models still spinning.
'er indoors bought a beautiful looking Dyson handheld vac about 5 years ago. The flexible tube in the powered head failed - this is the first time I have ever seen corrugated tube fail on a vacuum cleaner before.


A new head costs a remarkable £58. I saw a new body on ebay for a more reasonable £14, so I bought that.

Dismantling any Dyson product is a nightmare. They have hidden lugs that readily snap/ catch you out. The plastic is brittle and threaded receivers are prone to stripping. It is better to watch a youtube video telling you how to dismantle them before you get your tools out, if one exists.
I had to use a mobile phone repair kit to do the job as the components are so small/ delicate/ hidden etc.
To my horror, there is a slight change in the design of the shell. The shiny metal axel at the rear is a few mm larger than on the existing one meaning that I could not do the swap. Luckily I was able to remove the corrugated tube so mine could be repaired.
All just another example of - expensive to buy, fragile, prone to failure, expensive to replace, hard to find spares, nightmare to work on Dyson.
A few years ago a beautiful looking 6yr old Dyson fan that cost £300 blew a circuit board. Dyson no longer supported it, so it was scrap. Fans are normally some of the longest living of all electrical products with 1930s models still spinning.
'er indoors bought a beautiful looking Dyson handheld vac about 5 years ago. The flexible tube in the powered head failed - this is the first time I have ever seen corrugated tube fail on a vacuum cleaner before.


A new head costs a remarkable £58. I saw a new body on ebay for a more reasonable £14, so I bought that.

Dismantling any Dyson product is a nightmare. They have hidden lugs that readily snap/ catch you out. The plastic is brittle and threaded receivers are prone to stripping. It is better to watch a youtube video telling you how to dismantle them before you get your tools out, if one exists.
I had to use a mobile phone repair kit to do the job as the components are so small/ delicate/ hidden etc.

To my horror, there is a slight change in the design of the shell. The shiny metal axel at the rear is a few mm larger than on the existing one meaning that I could not do the swap. Luckily I was able to remove the corrugated tube so mine could be repaired.
All just another example of - expensive to buy, fragile, prone to failure, expensive to replace, hard to find spares, nightmare to work on Dyson.