Dibea C17 Review
Our Verdict
Our Analysis and Test Results
The Dibea finished right behind the Deik, only lagging behind by a single point. The Deik costs about $30 more, but is far superior at cleaning carpets. The Dibea and the Deik are both about the same level of convenience and equally easy to use, but the Dibea has a slight edge at cleaning hard floors. The Dibea finished a few points ahead of the Bissell AirRam, which costs about $90 more. However, the AirRam also outperformed the Dibea when it came to cleaning carpets.
Convenience
This model makes it very easy to swap out attachments, converting it into a handheld vacuum that can be used to clean other parts of your house. These accessories lock into place with the click of a button, and the Dibea includes an edge and small brush attachment, as well as the powered floor brush.
This cordless stick vacuum is slightly lighter than average, as shown below.
It also has a solid battery life, lasting for over 26 minutes. This compares very favorably with the rest of the group.
It takes a little over 4 hours to charge — about average for these products. Unfortunately, this vacuum is not stable enough to stand freely and must be stored mounted to a wall with the included bracket or propped up against something.
Hard Surface Cleaning
The Dibea handily sucked up all the debris in a single pass, although we had to use the high-power setting. The low power setting failed to pull the rice all the way into the collection bin and it would come cascading back out of the vacuum as soon as we turned the power off. We repeated this test with oats, with the Dibea performing similarly well, only requiring a quick subsequent pass to collect a few stray pieces.
Moving on to our flour challenge, the Dibea again did very well. It took about two passes to get all of the flour, even collecting some that fell into the cracks between boards.
Performance dropped a little when we tasked it with collecting pet hair, but it was still above average. However, it was in our Cheerios test that the performance of the Dibea really plummeted. This vacuum did an abysmal job, tending to push the Cheerios around rather than collecting them and they routinely got stuck in the front of the vacuum.
Ease of Use
Starting off, this product did a mediocre job at cleaning the edges of the room. The front of the vacuum can clean in close, but it does a horrible job when cleaning parallel to the edge, leaving tons of debris behind.
This vacuum has a very low profile, reaching a little over 34" under our simulated sofa.
This vacuum is extremely quiet — definitely one of the quietest that we have ever tested, as shown below.
The Dibea does have swivel steering, but we weren't fans of how it handles.
It greatly oversteers, over-rotating with the slightest touch. This made it a little difficult to maneuver and a bit of a pain to handle. This product also offers two cleaning modes, high and low power.
Carpet Cleaning
Starting off with rice, the Dibea did a mediocre job at cleaning the low-pile carpet, getting most of the debris on the surface. However, it did take four passes to get it marginally clean. This product did much worse with the fluffier carpet, leaving tons of debris embedded in the piles of the carpet.
It also struggled with the flour, delivering a mediocre performance on par with the Black+Decker and substantially worse than the Deik.
It redeemed itself a bit in the tests with oats, but it still performed below average on the whole. For the Cheerios challenge, it again tended to pile them up rather than collect them. The Dibea finished out this test with a particularly poor performance at collecting pet hair, leaving the bulk of the hair behind. It collected a few strands that were on the surface, but failed to extract any that was even remotely trapped in the piles of the carpet.
Value
For all of its flaws, the Dibea is actually a pretty solid option when shopping on a budget, provided you primarily have hard floors.
Conclusion
The Dibea does a decent job at handling lighter messes, lacking the power to clean carpets or heavier amounts of debris. If you have carpeted floors or more mess to clean, then the Deik is definitely a better option and worth the extra $30 bucks. However, if you only have hard floors and don't expect too much, the Dibea is a great option to save you some cash.












