The slow but steady approach of winter means that it's almost time for
many of us to fire up our heaters—also heralding the return of of
chapped lips and dry skin. Dyson's new humidifier is one solution to the
problem, but it doesn't only prevent dry air. It also ensures your home
isn't being filled with bacteria-ridden moisture thanks to a
germ-killing UV light.
Based on
the design of Dyson's well-regarded bladeless fans and heaters, the
company's new humidifier introduces a three-liter water reservoir that
uses a piezoelectric transducer (vibrating up to 1.7 million times a
second) to produce tiny airborne microscopic water particles. But the
water in that reservoir is just as susceptible to infiltration by germs
and bacteria as your dry winter sinuses are.
To
ensure that its new humidifier isn't just spreading sickness around your
home, the water in the reservoir is exposed to an ultraviolet light
twice to kill 99.9 percent of bacteria before the drops are sent
drifting through your home. So the odds of you getting sick and missing
work are greatly reduced (whether that's a pro or a con is up to you).
And because the humidifier uses Dyson's Air Multiplier technology, it
should do a much better job at boosting the humidity throughout your
entire home, and not just around the general vicinity of the actual
device.
Don't expect relief this winter, though, unless you live in Japan. Because like with its new Eye 360 robotic vacuum,
Dyson is holding off on a US release until next year, and its new
humidifier isn't expected to hit stores here until the fall of 2015. [Dyson]