Hurricane 360 Ergonomic Spray & Spin Mop
- Spray fluid right from the handle instead of sloshing it around from a filthy bucket
- Fill the reservoir with whatever cleaning fluid you want instead of buying somebody’s overpriced proprietary fluid for the rest of your life (we’re talking about Swiffer)
- Wash the microfiber mop head in the washing machine and reuse up to 300 times instead of buying somebody’s proprietary disposable replacement heads for the rest of your life (we mean Swiffer again)
- Model: SPM01 (one more digit might have won Google - as it is, it competes with some routers and speakers, plus it almost says “SPAM”)
Be the evil genius.
The Swiffer people are geniuses. Their WetJet is what mops should have been all along. Instead of an unwieldy bucket of suds, the cleaning fluid is right there on the mop. Instead of sloshing a bunch of steadily filthening water all over the floor, it sprays a little bit of fluid right when and where you need it. Tidy. Convenient. Genius.
The Swiffer people are evil geniuses. If you want to use the WetJet, you have to buy Swiffer cleaning fluid, because the fluid connector is proprietary. You have to buy Swiffer disposable mop heads, because the mop head connector is proprietary and they aren’t reusable. The price you pay for the WetJet’s convenience is locking yourself in Swiffer jail forever. Diabolical. Fiendish. Genius.
Hang on a minute, though. Here’s something called the Hurricane 360 Spray & Spin. It also has a fluid reservoir mounted on the stem. But you can refill the reservoir with whatever you want: your favorite floor cleaning solution, your Grandma’s secret soap formula, or just plain water. Instead of buying replacement mop heads forever, you can throw this one in the laundry and reuse it up to 300 times. And it’s got the same swivelly-type head as the Swiffer WetJet, but with a round head that rotates as you mop.
Swiffer thought they were pretty smart, luring you into their trap with the promise of tidy, convenient spray-mopping. But now you can get all that for a fraction of the cost, with the freedom to use it how you want. Who’s the genius now?