Dyson sounded a little affronted: "We have a digital electronic motor in this which spins at ,rpm, three times faster than any rival's. What kind of revolution do you want? He acknowledged though that the motor could be used for many other applications, including some in the home. Dyson - the British engineering group - has unveiled a device that combines a high-speed hand dryer with hot and cold water outlets.
The firm's founder, Sir James Dyson, said that the device offered long-term savings over hot air dryers and towels. However, one expert said its appeal might be limited until its cost fell. Infrared sensors detect where the user's hands are - if placed under the tap's centre water comes out, if under its sides the air nozzles are triggered. The firm said that the technology was protected by granted patents with another pending.
Dyson's existing Airblade range - launched in - has proved a money spinner for the firm. It said that to date the hand dryers had been installed in more than , locations worldwide.
Although the minimalistic hybrid water-air tap head is the device's signature feature, Sir James said that the "secret" of the machine was its motor, which had taken seven years to develop.
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More information can be found in our Cookies Policy and Privacy Policy. James Dyson is famous for having invented the cyclonic vacuum cleaner, although he has other inventions to his name such as the ball-barrow, with a ball instead of a front wheel.
But he was not personally responsible for the latest product from the company that bears his name — instead, it was the brainchild of an un-named member of the strong team of engineers and scientists who work for Dyson. While studying the properties of air-flow, it was found that wet hands put in front of a stream of fast-moving unheated air were dried by that airstream.
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