Noisy Vacuum Cleaners: Is There Such a Thing as a Silent One?

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Vacuum cleaners are inherently noisy due to mechanical vibrations from moving parts and chaotic airflow. Achieving a completely silent vacuum is impossible, but quieter models exist, often at a higher price point. Marketing strategies have led to the design of specific sounds for vacuum cleaners, as consumers often prefer recognizable "sucking" noises. Despite attempts to create silent models, they have not gained popularity in the market. Overall, most vacuums are louder than necessary due to technical and marketing choices.
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I was studying when something disturbed me. Why are vacuum cleaners so noisy? Is there such a thing as a silent vacuum cleaner?
 
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Any time something hard hits something else hard it deforms and vibrates. If this vibrations is an audible frequency you hear it. When you have a gear box and motor there are a lot of hard things hitting each other all the time. So pretty much any thing that moves enough, like the pump in a vacuum cleaner makes noise.

On top of that you got all the rushing air coming and going across complicated surfaces and boundaries flowing in chaotic ways impossible to calculate. All this makes for a great deal of vibrations in the air which you also hear.

You're never going to get a perfectly quiet vacuum. You could put a lot of effort into designing a quiet-er vacuum like people have put effort into designing quiet cars, but that would just make the vac more expensive.
 
I saw a tv advert for a silent vacuum cleaner (from Dyson, I think) where you can hear a cat licking his paw, but you can't hear the vacuum cleaner. How true that is, I have no idea, but I think there must be some reasonably quieter (read expensive) models on the market.
 
xunxine said:
I was studying when something disturbed me. Why are vacuum cleaners so noisy? Is there such a thing as a silent vacuum cleaner?

To a large exent because people do not want to buy silent vacuum cleaners. There have been several attempts to market silent models but they simply do not sell very well.
Most of the large companies that sell household appliances have whole departments where sound designers (and yes, that is actually a job title) work with the engineers to come up with just the right "sucking" sound for the vacuum cleaner.

Note that there are of course limits to just HOW silent you could make a vacuum cleaner if you really tried; but the main point here is that most of the models you find on the market are actually quite a bit louder than they have to be for technical reasons.

Sound design has become increasingly important marketing tool over the past few years and many of the sounds you hear do not sound the way they do by accident (another obvious example is the sound a car makes)
 
I think it's easist first to watch a short vidio clip I find these videos very relaxing to watch .. I got to thinking is this being done in the most efficient way? The sand has to be suspended in the water to move it to the outlet ... The faster the water , the more turbulance and the sand stays suspended, so it seems to me the rule of thumb is the hose be aimed towards the outlet at all times .. Many times the workers hit the sand directly which will greatly reduce the water...
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