Cool Concept: Design Student Turns Broom Into Vacuum Cleaner
For a machine that fitting sucks air into a canister, vacuums are intensely complicated machines. Ones that often wind up breaking in one way or the other, causing you to undulate it and cop a new one or send it to a repairman (yes, they still exist. There's one down the block from the 'Plex offices.). British design graduate Ben Fursdon took some things to design a vacuum based on a household broom that was simply constructed and easy to disassemble, fix, and clean.
Dubbed the Broo-ver, Fursdon's vacuum was the consequence of of him visiting a landfil and seeing the tremendous number of discarded vacuum cleaners. He spent some time studying vacuum construction, visiting the U.K.'s only vacuum cleaner before embarking on his transmit. His creation is a lightweight, simple-to-use vacuum with all the components—clear dust canister, hose, motor, and nozzle—obviously lined down the stick of the broom.
As of now there are no plans to produce Broo-ver, so Britain's other popular vacuum-maker, Dyson, can lounge easy.




