The arrival of a new Dyson stick vacuum cleaner is always a small event. Will the V15 Detect Absolute, equipped with its laser and particle counter, make us forget its glorious ancestors? Answer this complete test!
Points forts
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Desire to perform.
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Perfect filtration.
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Simple maintenance.
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Precise Autonomy Indicators.
Weak points
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The device is a bit heavy in the long run.
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A bit of a gadget laser.
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Boost mode runs out of steam very quickly.
With its V15 Detect Absolute, Dyson produces no unpleasant surprises. We can’t mistake it for suction, filtration or maintenance. The holy trinity of stick vacuum cleaners. However, there is a slight flavor of “could do better”. Of course, it’s not always easy to innovate efficiently, but the laser is synonymous with a gadget function and the old “high torque” intelligent brush ultimately had more or less the same mission as the particle counter, i.e. automatically adapt the suction power. is We would have preferred that Dyson tackled the device’s weight, or its somewhat limited autonomy in Boost mode for our taste.
Note: The price drop reported is calculated by comparing the lowest price of the day with the average of the lowest prices charged by all merchants for the product in the previous month, excluding in-store prices. with protective rules for those whose VAT policy is unclear (so-called “grey” stores, usually in the case of imports from China).
An alternative
As long as you take the time to choose a suction head that suits the surface to be vacuumed, the Dreame R20 accomplishes its mission effectively. Plus, thanks to the high-efficiency multi-cyclonic filtration, maintaining the device is child’s play. Sure, we would have appreciated a boost mode that might have been a bit more durable or gauged remaining autonomy in minutes and seconds instead of percentages, but that doesn’t detract from the R20’s very successful impression at all. coming