Spacecraft! I acknowledge that this is not regular behavior for our household, but I cleaned the entire apartment by myself after stealing the vacuum cleaner from my wife and using it. It has baffled me how such a compact vacuum cleaner with a suction capacity of only 25 watts (!) may be utilized for the task for which it was designed. As a point of reference, the power output of our traditional everyday "Korean" television was 260 watts (at one time). It worked out to be -! It appears to be a problem with the nozzles. Includes a total of 5 nozzles, 3 of which come equipped with a motor. Suck and collect effectively - wool, dust, grits, and the like - but, they consume the battery. If the process takes forty minutes without nozzles, then using nozzles cuts that time down to twenty to twenty-five. Given that it is a matter of nozzles, the vacuum cleaner in and of itself is fantastic; however, given that it is a question of nozzles, I am hoping that the actual service life of these nozzles with motors will be longer than the warranty period of two years, given that I haven't seen such nozzles supplied by Dyson separately. The weight is distributed quite well, so that it feels natural in the hand, and no one area is noticeably heavier than the others. This "blaster" was used by the son of our friends' neighbor to frighten all of our guests as he rushed around our flat. A couple of days later, when I went to clean the automobile, I terrified the neighbors who were in the elevator. Because the blown air is filtered by a couple of small internal filters that are washable, the vacuum cleaner has another benefit, which is that the little daughter can now be allowed to use the vacuum cleaner, as the smell of dust is eliminated and the loudness does not terrify her. There is a mistake in this part of the description; the battery that comes with a genuine vacuum cleaner is made of Li-Ion, not Ni-Mh.