samsung handy vacuum cleaner

Item code : 434648775 SAMSUNGSamsung VC-PS85 Wireless Cordless Stick Handy Vacuum Cleaner 2 in 1 See all SAMSUNG items From Overseas (South Korea) fast delivery and good item Samsung VC-PS85 Wireless Vacuum cleaner warranty for power adaptor My power adapter broken after few months. Is this item covered under warranty? If yes, what is your shipping address, so that I can send it back to you for repair or replacement. [Re] warranty for power adaptor HelloDo not get the service. It is a consumable part, and consumer use is brokenIf you need adaptersItem code: 465088036http://list.qoo10.sg/GMKT.INC/Goods/Goods.aspx?goodscode=465088036It can be purchased. Extra battery and Power Adapter Hi, how can we purchase an extra battery and power adapter? My power adapter has stopped working after 1 month.Extra battery and Power Adapter customerTry to connect the same power adapter.If the power adapter is brokenPlease send it to me.I will send after repaired by Samsung service center.

If you want to buy, I will send after purchase. Ordered more than a week ago but have not received. Sorry for your inconveniencesometimes delay happen on shipmentYou'll receive soon within 2-3 daysThank you.And how to buy? [Re] warranty & batterySouth Korea 1 Year WarrantyBattery (free shipping), about 40 Singapore dollarsThank you. Need any filter and using cyclone to vacuum ?Any english manual ?You do not need to buy it separately.If you clean the filter is permanently available. But easy to use. u mean the filter is washable ?also, is it using cyclone technology for suction like dyson ? customerRemoving Dust lightly and use.You can also use the water flowing gently wash and dry it.This is not a cyclone. what is the charging time and how long can battery last? customerhigh speed chargeworking for 15minby charging 5 hoursThank you (642 items on sale Go to Shop) Samsung VC-H20 Cordless Ha... 2014 model year new models... Genuine SAMSUNG power adap...

Water heated mat pad Mattr... How to disassemble Samsung navibot SR8875? circuit diagram or schematic for accu loading Short shift and turn. The Samsung NaviBot is the new age in robotic vacuum cleaning; offering a more intelligent and more efficient way to clean your home. It cleans your carpets and floors with its triple brush system at the push of a button, and can self navigate and recharge itself when needed.
samsung upright vacuum cleaner reviewIt can also adjust itself depending on the environment and is the perfect modern day cleaner...leaving you more time to enjoy yourself.
dyson vacuum cleaner motor Mirror blue dust coverFoam Pre-Motor FilterHEPA Exhaust FilterDimensions: 360 x 360 x 105 (Net W x H x D, mm)Weight: 4kgBagless Dust Collection0.3m/sec cleaning speedNi-MH battery type
vacuum cleaner bagless or not

SR8855 NaviBot Robotic Cleaner A few years ago, the name Roomba was synonymous with robot vacuums. A few contenders have come onto the scene to challenge iRobot’s supremacy, most recently the Samsung POWERbot VR9000. It looks different from the competition and has some standout features. It’s $999 price tag means you probably want the bot to handle the majority of your cleaning for you, but you still might have to muck out your rooms’ corners. Inside the box, there are a few more bits and pieces than with many other robot vacuums. You get the unit itself, a docking station, a remote, and a cleaning brush, as well as an optional virtual guard. The vac is pretty much ready to start cleaning once you’ve charged it up, but you’ll want the remote handy. Unlike the round Roomba, the POWERbot looks a bit like Samsung lopped the top off an upright vacuum, leaving nothing but the base. It has an LED screen that illuminates blue, as well as a camera pointed at the ceiling to help scope out its surroundings and avoid collisions.

A tubular dustbin protrudes a bit from the top. The vacuum is just over five inches tall, and while it managed to get under all our furniture, that height is something to keep in mind. Plus its design makes it a little less likely that any cats will climb aboard, as one Digital Trends staffer pointed out to me. One strange thing I found about the dustbin is that the vacuum still operates without it in place – you wouldn’t want to, of course, but it will. When I tested this out, the vac flung the little bits of rice it was sucking up into the air from its empty cavity. Underneath the black-and-copper surface, there’s a brush and six wheels of varying sizes, allowing it to pivot relatively smoothly when it needs to get out of a tight spot. There’s also an emergency power switch you might have to toggle if you get an error code. Its 12.2-inch cleaning path is marginally larger than the Roomba 880’s 12-inch one, and its 0.7-liter (about 2.9 cups) dustbin is the same size as Neato’s Botvac.

Yes, you could just hit the “auto” button and set the POWERbot to work, but you’d be missing out on some important features. There are four cleaning options on the vac itself: auto (cleans until it determines it’s done every inch), spot clean (covers that five-foot-by-five-foot mess you’ve made), max clean (depletes its battery covering all the territory it can), and manual clean (use the remote to annoy others choose where the bot cleans). Though it also has the same four buttons as the unit, you’ll really want the remote to harness all the bot’s features. It’s how you’ll schedule your cleaning times, silence the vacuum’s beeping, and direct it. It’s also how you’ll amp up the power, in both auto and manual mode, with the “dust sensor.” The “point cleaning” feature is pretty handy that lets you drive the vacuum to a specific spot, unlike the spot clean, which charts its own path within a limited area. If you notice the POWERbot has missed a section or you just want to clean near the kitchen sink, you hold down the point-cleaning button and train the remote’s red target at the pile of fixings you dropped on the floor.

If it’s in range, the little guy will come over and tidy up. Driving the robot with the remote control is actually quite fun and easy to get the hang of. The POWERbot was far more responsive to the controls than when I used the remote for the LCD screen; when I was programming the cleaning schedule, I kept missing my target time by over-pressing the buttons. The POWERbot pulled flour, sand, and rice off our carpet pretty well. Our benchmark vacuum only managed to pick up a couple more grams each of rice and sand than the robot, though it did remove about 20 grams more flour. The POWERbot actually got helplessly confused when its sensors got covered in a layer of flour, resulting in the vacuum trying to climb the walls. Both vacuums left some debris behind on every test, and only picking up the carpet and shaking it removed the rest of the flour, rice, or sand. Instead of careening off objects, the POWERbot slows down and gently nudges them in an exploratory fashion. My cat is part Maine Coon, so he has hair to spare.

How does the POWERbot fare against fur? I grabbed some and headed to work to find out. (I always fear getting murdered before I get to the office when I have a bag full of cat fur in my backpack; all I picture is a Detective Tutuola-type trying to figure out how the creepy tchotchke fits into my death.) Good news: The POWERbot had no trouble getting fur off the carpet or floor. Cleaning a 16-by-20-foot room took 38 minutes, not including the three times it got stuck between one of the five chairs’ legs. Nearly 100 percent of the mix of gunk was in the dustbin by the time the bot was finished, though the edges of the wall and objects such as chairs definitely still had quite a few of the oats I had scattered left around them. One of the most impressive things about the POWERbot is that it’s a gentle giant. Instead of careening off objects, it would slow down and gently nudge them in an exploratory fashion. It was rugged enough to run over flatter obstacles, and it could go from a cement floor to a mid-pile carpet without getting stuck.

However, chair legs could thwart its sensors, and the bot would just shut down and refuse to move. Usually it could get back to its charging station to re-energize, though it would sometimes try pretty baffling routes first — like going in the opposite direction. Once, the little guy just looked so lost, I guided him back home with the help of the remote. I let the POWERbot run around the same room four times to pick up a mix of debris, and the results were as mixed as the messy concoction. Twice it managed to pick up everything in sight; the other two times, it left patches of carpet unvacuumed. Surprisingly, one of these less-than-stellar results was the final time, so it’s not like the bot was just learning its way around at first. The POWERbot is powerful, easy to use, and has some neat features. It’s good on both carpet and bare floors, picking up a good amount of debris and pet hair. It’s rugged enough to roll right over minor obstacles but gentle enough not to bang the hell out of your table legs.