Hair Dryers: Design and Dry Your Locks Together

December 3, 2009 by  

Visualize life with no hair dryers and you will see yourself with soaking wet hair soaking your clothing or with ugly, unkempt tresses. Every household has one or more hair dryers for everyday use while the bigger and heavy duty types are usually found in hectic salons.

Once you’ve discovered the wonderful device that is known as a pink ceramic hair dryer and mastered its procedure, you would by no means go back to drying your hair the usual way. Who would have thought that your “standing in front of the desk fan and rubbing your mane with a towel” days will really be over?

The conventional hair dryers use metal coils to make warm air. The major inconvenience of the older varieties is that you can’t really control the heat and sometimes it can really get too hot. These metal coils are also likely to spark and sometimes kaput unexpectedly. The newer and progressed hair dryers are much more concerned about having strong hair than just drying or styling it. Improved hair dryer models include ceramic, ionic and tourmaline.

The ceramic dryers are much more effective than metal units because it spreads heat evenly nor will it get too hot. Ionic hair dryers work by shriveling the water droplets in a person’s hair and leave it softer and sleeker. The tourmaline units use tourmaline gems in its coil and produce double as much negative ion than the ionic dryers.

Before buying a particular type of hair dryer, it is best to pick out something lightweight yet sturdy.

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Comments

6 Responses to “Hair Dryers: Design and Dry Your Locks Together”

  1. vers andevrinoz on April 29th, 2010 2:15 pm

    Metal changes the inductance. Ever notice the road patches at stoplights? They put a metal detector in the road to sense if a car is waiting at the light.

    So basically, it depends on the frequency of the metal detector circuit. You want to use the right inductance value so that the oscillator operates at the designed frequency.

    You can change the diameter of the coil to suit your application.

  2. Dreamtvuk on September 8th, 2010 7:03 am

    Now this is a wonderful, practical device every techy could find a use for

  3. hopkinsmednews on November 19th, 2010 12:25 am

    Catheter advanced into ovarian vein, Xray dye used to show the anatomy, vein if abnormal, blocked using metal coils &/or sclerosant #jhpcs

  4. gmdudotnet on February 14th, 2011 6:31 am

    #aluminum #coils #non #ferrous Hangzhou Binjiang Nonferrous Metal Materials Co., Ltd.

  5. bufocalvin on April 6th, 2011 4:16 am

    Thanks for writing, Dave!

    I totally understand that kind of “read while they shop” experience. When my SO (Significant Other) and I go into a clothing store, I always look for the shoe section…you can be sure they have a place to sit. :) The opposite used to be true about bookstores. I would want to spend hours in one, even if I didn't buy anything. My SO wanted to find something and get out…no objections to bookstores, but just didn't get the “browse and not buy” idea. I don't do that in bookstores any more…not since my Kindle.

    My offspring has the same iPhone concern. It's this wonderful device, but there is that battery drain problem. It's kind of like that last canteen in the old desert movies…you really, really want to use it, but you are trying to make it last. ;)

    The iPad does say it will last for ten hours, which ought to get people through the day in an urban setting. It won't last on camping trips, the way some people use Kindles, though.

    As to the carrying thing, I wear a photojournalist type vest when I'm not at work (I think of it like Doc Savage's “utility vest”…which came before Batman's belt). It's got a nice pocket (two actually) that holds my 6″ Kindle (and headphones and Kindle Kandle).

    I can really seeing me using a tablet, similar to the way you describe. It will have to some form of word processing, though. The iPad will, but it's not clear that the joojoo will. I'm not trying to diversify the Kindle, but I'm a better-than-average typist, and may be a below-average “thumb typist”. If I could have an accessory for my Kindle, it would be a full-size keyboard (probably roll up or projection). I also do watch video online (usually short ones), and the Kindle browsing is too clunky for e-mail.

    Books into K4PC: they just have to be the right format. For example, go to FeedBooks.com on your computer with K4PC. When you go to download a book, choose the Mobipocket/Kindle version. It should want to open it in your Kindle 4 PC, and after that, it will be in your Kindle Content folder. You can also put unprotected mobi/prc files directly into that folder, I believe. The books, though, will not be in your archives (they won't be available to other devices).

    Thanks again!

  6. dynquetaip on December 2nd, 2011 10:28 pm

    < Neptune Giftware Mens Black 5 Leather Strap Surf Wristband Bracelet With >em/em<>em/em< & Brown Coloured Cord – 0023 For Great Deals

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