Hamilton Beach Appliance Parts
The modern electric hair dryer was the result of two inventions that had nothing to do with each other: the vacuum cleaner and blender, see here their origin. Racine, Wisconsin. and two of the first models, called "Race" and "Cyclone", appeared in 1920, both manufactured by companies in Wisconsin: Racine Universal Motor Company and Hamilton Beach. In the first decade of this century, it was customary to assign multiple roles to a single device, especially the appliances, since electricity was hailed as the supreme power of the story. This ploy to increase sales, and the public had become accustomed to multifunction devices. Hoover was not an exception. One of the first ads appeared Cleaner Pneumatic device called a woman sitting at her dressing table, drying her hair with a hose plugged into the vacuum. With an approach that was to ask why waste hot air, the ad text assures readers that while the front of the machine vacuum and removes dust and dirt, after generating a stream of fresh air and pure . Although the first vacuum cleaners were sold in quantities moderately successful, no one knows the extent to which users made the most out of them. Anyway, was born the idea of ??drying the hair using a current of air. What delayed the onset of an electric dryer manual for hair was the absence of a small engine and effective despite its low power (whichever is technically known inventors as "fraction of horse engine"). Racine, Wisconsin, is also the home of the first mixer and blender for milkshakes. Although no patent that the blender mixer until 1922, for more than a decade had made efforts to perfect an underpowered engine, particularly the Racine Universal Motor Company and Hamilton Beach. Therefore, in principle, the discharge of hot air from the vacuum came to marry the compact motor of the blender to produce a modern hair dryer, made in Racine. Bulky, low energy, fairly heavy and frequent overheating, the first dryer manual was, however, more effective to shape the hairstyles that vacuum, and set the trend for decades. The improvements introduced over the years. thirties and forties included various controls for temperature and speeds. The first major change in portable dryers appeared in the catalog of Sears, Roebuck for autumn-winter of 1951. This device, which sold for $ 12. 95, consisted of a hand dryer and a pink plastic cap attached directly to the blower nozzle, and fitted the head of the woman. . . .