Dyson has announced the first technologically advanced Bluetooth headset, which includes a muzzle that purifies the air and cancels out unwanted noise at the same time.
newspaper says,The Guardian“The company wants to use its expertise in air purification in its new range of headphones, aimed at city dwellers who want to avoid air pollution and prevent noise.”
Dyson will be showing off a set of big, plush headphones with a plastic mask that goes from ear to ear through the wearer’s mouth, looking like something out of a science fiction movie.
The design contains a motor, a piston fan, and a double-layer filter (filter), to purify the air at each ear, to provide a column of fresh air, as air is drawn through the filters to clean it of 99 percent of small particles, including bacteria and dust, as well as pollutants Gas such as sulfur or nitrogen dioxide. The filtered air is then pushed along the inside of the condom, and directed directly into the nose without touching the skin of the face.
Get in the zone with Dyson’s latest technology.
30 years of air filtration expertise pioneered into a wearable, high-end audio device. With a contact-free visor to supply a continuous stream of purified air to your nose and mouth. So, you can breathe cleaner air, anywhere.
— Dyson (@Dyson) March 30, 2022
The headphones also have sensors that detect the speed at which the wearer is moving, and automatically adjust the air flow between three levels of intensity to make sure they deliver up to five liters of clean air per second, which is the breathing rate while jogging.
An air quality sensor on the left earcup monitors pollution levels in real time, sends data to a phone app and tells you when to replace filters, which are supposed to last regarding 12 months of use in Europe, or less in more polluted environments.
The mask has volume-adjustable arms, and is attached to the headphones via a magnet that can be detached, so that it falls to the wearer’s chin, shutting off the fans to allow people to talk.
Meanwhile, Active Noise Cancellation technology, similar to that found in many other company products such as Sony, is used via anti-acoustic waves.
The battery lasts from one and a half to four and a half hours, and it lasts up to 40 hours when used as a headphone, and it quickly charges up to 60 percent in 20 minutes.
The Dyson Zone is set to go on sale in the fall at an as yet undisclosed price, but the Guardian expects it to be in the £500 to £1,000 range.