
Dyson bundle deal: Get two cult-favourite cleaning devices for under $1000
Amazon Australia is offering one of the most impressive cleaning bundle deals we've seen in its Mid-Year Sale.
Right now, you can score both the Dyson WashG1 2-in-1 Hard Floor Cleaner and the Dyson V8 Cordless Vacuum Cleaner for just $949, down from $1,798.
That's a jaw-dropping 47 per cent off, saving you a massive $849.
With 4.6 stars and two amazing devices under $1000, you need to run to buy this deal.
This bundle includes two powerhouse devices designed to make everyday cleaning quicker, easier and far more effective.
Whether you're dealing with stubborn spills in the kitchen or fluff-covered carpets in the living room.
The Dyson WashG1: Australia's no.1 wet hard floor cleaner
This clever 2-in-1 machine is made to simplify your cleaning routine.
It's fitted with two counter-rotating microfibre rollers that can handle wet and dry messes at the same time, no vacuuming required beforehand.
It tackles everything from food spills to muddy paw prints and cleans three times faster than your trusty mop.
The rollers spin at 455 times a minute, gliding smoothly even under furniture and into tricky corners.
The densely-packed microfibre rollers (we're talking 64,800 filaments per cm) give your floors that streak-free sparkle, while the secondary brush bars whisk away hair and debris into hygienic separate waste trays.
It even separates the dirty water from the dry mess, so there's no gross grey puddle situation.
And with a rechargeable battery offering up to 35 minutes of floor washing power, you'll get through a full clean before you even think about recharging.
The Dyson V8 Cordless Vacuum: Lightweight, powerful, and surprisingly quiet
While the WashG1 dominates on hard floors, the Dyson V8™ is your go-to for carpets, sofas and everything in between.
It's built with Dyson's digital motor that spins at a wild 110,000 rpm, delivering powerful suction across all surfaces.
It runs for up to 40 minutes and features 43 polycarbonate hair removal vanes, designed to lift stubborn pet hair or human strands from the brush bar and send them straight into the bin, not back onto your floor.
It's also fitted with an advanced filter system that traps 99.99 per cent of microscopic dust as small as 0.3 microns, helping to reduce allergens and leave your air feeling cleaner, too.
Why this deal is worth jumping on
Buying these two devices separately would normally set you back close to $1,800.
With this bundle, you're getting both for less than $1,000.
Whether you've got messy toddlers, shedding pets or just want to upgrade your cleaning gear without spending big, this is one of those deals that doesn't come around often.
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7NEWS
2 days ago
- 7NEWS
Dyson bundle deal: Get two cult-favourite cleaning devices for under $1000
Amazon Australia is offering one of the most impressive cleaning bundle deals we've seen in its Mid-Year Sale. Right now, you can score both the Dyson WashG1 2-in-1 Hard Floor Cleaner and the Dyson V8 Cordless Vacuum Cleaner for just $949, down from $1,798. That's a jaw-dropping 47 per cent off, saving you a massive $849. With 4.6 stars and two amazing devices under $1000, you need to run to buy this deal. This bundle includes two powerhouse devices designed to make everyday cleaning quicker, easier and far more effective. Whether you're dealing with stubborn spills in the kitchen or fluff-covered carpets in the living room. The Dyson WashG1: Australia's no.1 wet hard floor cleaner This clever 2-in-1 machine is made to simplify your cleaning routine. It's fitted with two counter-rotating microfibre rollers that can handle wet and dry messes at the same time, no vacuuming required beforehand. It tackles everything from food spills to muddy paw prints and cleans three times faster than your trusty mop. The rollers spin at 455 times a minute, gliding smoothly even under furniture and into tricky corners. The densely-packed microfibre rollers (we're talking 64,800 filaments per cm) give your floors that streak-free sparkle, while the secondary brush bars whisk away hair and debris into hygienic separate waste trays. It even separates the dirty water from the dry mess, so there's no gross grey puddle situation. And with a rechargeable battery offering up to 35 minutes of floor washing power, you'll get through a full clean before you even think about recharging. The Dyson V8 Cordless Vacuum: Lightweight, powerful, and surprisingly quiet While the WashG1 dominates on hard floors, the Dyson V8™ is your go-to for carpets, sofas and everything in between. It's built with Dyson's digital motor that spins at a wild 110,000 rpm, delivering powerful suction across all surfaces. It runs for up to 40 minutes and features 43 polycarbonate hair removal vanes, designed to lift stubborn pet hair or human strands from the brush bar and send them straight into the bin, not back onto your floor. It's also fitted with an advanced filter system that traps 99.99 per cent of microscopic dust as small as 0.3 microns, helping to reduce allergens and leave your air feeling cleaner, too. Why this deal is worth jumping on Buying these two devices separately would normally set you back close to $1,800. With this bundle, you're getting both for less than $1,000. Whether you've got messy toddlers, shedding pets or just want to upgrade your cleaning gear without spending big, this is one of those deals that doesn't come around often.


7NEWS
2 days ago
- 7NEWS
‘Game-changing' Dreame H12 PRO Cordless Wet Dry Vacuum Cleaner slashed in price
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Man of Many
3 days ago
- Man of Many
How Dyson's ‘Problem-First' Mindset Keeps it Ahead of the Game
By Dean Blake - News Published: 4 June 2025 |Last Updated: 3 June 2025 Share Copy Link Readtime: 8 min Every product is carefully selected by our editors and experts. If you buy from a link, we may earn a commission. Learn more. For more information on how we test products, click here. When you think of innovative companies—I mean truly innovative companies—there are really only a few that spring to mind. Apple, with its reinvention of the consumer electronics space during the Steve Jobs era, and Amazon's shift from redefining how we sell books online to how we sell everything online being two massive examples of what it takes to be considered an innovator in today's markets: and yet, I would say that when it comes to hardware innovation, few brands can stand toe-to-toe with Dyson. Between re-imagining the vacuum cleaner into a new industry standard of bagless, cyclonic devices that run smoother and are easier to operate—with the recent announcement of the PencilVac taking that concept to its natural conclusion: a broom with a vacuum in the brush head—the English-born business has also taken aim at other analogous industries ripe for new ideas: hair dryers and straighteners, air purifiers, and even headphones. What is it that ties all these efforts together? Simply put: it's a focus on problem-solving embedded deep in the DNA of the company. Dyson founder Sir James Dyson working in his studio | Image: Dyson Problems first, solutions second When Sir James Dyson initially invented the business' foundational cyclonic vacuum technology back in 1991, it wasn't out of some great brainwave or realisation that this was the future of consumer vacuums. Rather, it was due to his own personal frustration with the then-industry standard. See, the likes of vacuum technology almost 30 years ago were far less user-friendly. At the time, each vacuum needed a plastic, single-use bag to be attached, which would be filled up with dust and debris as you cleaned and then thrown away—destined for landfill. As an engineer, Dyson had grown frustrated by the need to constantly buy and refit vacuum bags while cleaning his workstation, and realised the need for something better. Remembering his time at a saw mill, and the large cyclonic cleaner used to clean the space as people worked, Dyson set about finding a way to take something absolutely massive (literally industrial in scale) and scale it down for consumer use. 5,126 failed prototypes later, the company and product we know and love today was born. Necessity, they say, is the mother of all invention, and to say this invention revolutionised the vacuum space is an understatement: try and find a vacuum cleaner that requires a bag these days and you'll find it impossible, and it comes down to one thing. Dyson saw a problem, solved it, and sold the solution—and this is still how the company operates today. Sir James Dyson with the Dyson PencilVac, showcasing the motor | Image: Dean Blake/Man of Many ' exactly the same,' Sir James Dyson tells us. 'We're engineers and we want to develop technology and make better products using that technology, and that's exactly what we do today.' It is, in fact, the business' mission statement: a focus on solving the problems that others have ignored with technology and ingenuity. Part of that focus comes from the fact the business has never gone public. Rather than answer to a board of shareholders, Dyson (the company) really only answers to Dyson (the man) and its customers. 'We don't have a CEO that comes in to run the company and then leaves, and then a new CEO comes in and does things differently. It's the same old me with the same philosophy: not to get big or make money, but to make interesting products,' he says. The other key to Dyson's success is in having the space to create a culture of innovation within the company: fundamentally, it's a company-wide mindset that sets the business apart from its competition, Dyson's head of home Tom Moody explains. 'We have lots of creative and inventive people looking for new problems to solve, or creative ways they can apply themselves. I think that's what pushes us forward,' Moody says. ' has to solve a problem. In some places there might be a more clear 'here is what we want, go ahead and engineer it', but that's not the Dyson way. For us, it's more about 'here's what we discovered in our customers' homes', some frustrations they're facing, and giving our engineers the space to explore that. 'That gives them the latitude and license to create.' Dyson PencilVac | Image: Supplied Merging form and function You'd be forgiven for hearing all that and then thinking: well then why aren't Dyson's products over-engineered? In fact, Dyson's products often strike a near-perfect balance between aesthetics and functionality—delivering the performance and features you want from a vacuum cleaner, hair dryer, straightener, or air purification system, but in a package you're happy to showcase to friends and family. This largely comes from the company's focus on keeping all product staff involved in the product design process from the beginning. Moody notes that even at conceptual stages, engineers are often in contact with the brand's innovation department, as well as its design team, in order to ensure the company hits a balance between solving a problem and creating new ones. 'That ensures that we don't get to a stage later in a product's process where we say 'we've engineered a solution, but it's big, bulky, and it'd never be accepted by a customer',' he explains. 'We try to bake it in at an early stage during the design process.' And while it's rare, there are instances of the business putting the cart before the horse a little, and actively dictating the form of a product before the engineers have even had time to conceptualise a solution: case in point, the PencilVac. While Dyson made its name in miniaturising an industrial cyclonic cleaner into something customers could drag around their homes, its next bet is on cramming the concept of a vacuum into a simple tool: a broom. It's something Sir James Dyson has wanted to create for a while, but hadn't been able to crack the size-to-performance barrier: until now. Dyson PencilVac | Image: Supplied How did they do it? By throwing out their vacuum technology almost entirely, and leaning instead on the smaller motors used in the creation of their SuperSonic Hair Dryer products. While it's an upgraded and reinvented version of the V9 motor (now known as the Dyson Hyperdymium motor), it's fundamentally the same bit of tech used in the SuperSonic R, down to the size of the broom handle mimicking the size of the hair dryer exactly to ensure the motor functions as expected: 38 millimetres. No more, no less. 'James had long desired to create something that was in a very, very slim format and the size, 38 millimetres, is obviously very linked specifically to the enabling technology that we have,' Moody explains. 'We spent many years designing the V9 motor to try to get something to fit within that package, and so it's really an extension of that logic. It's something that's ergonomic and comfortable for our customers to use.' Dyson himself prefers it when engineering can dictate the solution, but admits it's sometimes preferable to have a more defined box to invent within. Necessity, again, is the mother of invention. 'Sometimes it's quite a good idea to have the form drive the function, rather than the other way around,' he says. 'With the PencilVac, the shape drove everything else because I wanted it to be like a broom. I wanted it to be very simple and easy to use. You can just grab it and there's no special grip or anything – it's just a completely natural tool. And that shape drove the technology.' Dyson PencilVac | Image: Supplied Keeping The Faith The PencilVac is, in a lot of ways, the final frontier for cleaning tech. It's hard to imagine a smaller vacuum still striking the right balance between usability and capability, but Sir Dyson already has eyes on smaller models: he just needs the tech to catch up. All of that doesn't mean anything if no one buys the products, though. While Dyson has entered a number of new categories, and intends to launch into more, it never bets on products being a huge success out of the gate. 'When you launch a new product you never know that you're going to sell it—I don't know that the PencilVac will sell well,' Dyson explains. 'It's all a risk, but if you stick to the principle that what you're trying to do is solve problems and make something easier to use, even if it's in a new category, you can make headway because you believe what you've done is a genuine improvement. 'You just have to have faith and hope it works.' Disclaimer: The author of this article, Dean Blake, was invited to test the Dyson PencilVac and talk to Sir James Dyson and Tom Moody at a Dyson event in Tokyo, Japan.