Some were natural engineers, and some were janitors, but that did not stop them to be great inventors. We had many variants of vacuum cleaners throughout history. They all worked on similar principles, but they approached them from different angles trying to solve important problems of efficiency, noise, and health. Read more interesting vacuum cleaner facts. Vacuum cleaners are products of the Industrial Revolution in every way. They appeared as a solution to a problem that the revolution caused, but they could not be possible without it.
So here is their relationship. Find out more about vacuum cleaner making process. It had rotating brush and bellows which generated suction.
After that, in , Ives W. John S. The first vacuum cleaner that used the same principle as those that we use today was invented by Hubert Cecil Booth of England in He placed a handkerchief on the seat of a restaurant chair, put his mouth to the handkerchief and sucked the air in. When he saw how much of the dust gathered on the handkerchief, he knew that his idea has merit. The Puffing Billy was first powered by an oil engine and later by an electric motor, but Booth never achieved much success with his large machine, which required a horse-drawn carriage for transport.
Walter Griffiths developed an improved manual vacuum cleaner in Birmingham, England in The operator pumped a bellows-like contraption to suck up dirt through a flexible pipe; this was the first device that resembled a modern vacuum cleaner. Between and , New Jersey inventor David T. The one who succeeded had a more personal stake in the vacuum. James Murray Spangler worked as a department store janitor who invented on the side. He writes:. To solve this issue, Spangler made his own vacuum cleaner from a tin soapbox, a sateen pillowcase as a dust collector , and a broom handle.
Inside of the box, he had an electric motor he pulled from a sewing machine which powered a fan and a rotating brush. The crudely-made machine collected dirt and blew it out the back, where it was caught by an attached dust bag the pillowcase. They're still making vacuums with the Hoover name today.
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