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Natalie Hemengül
Product test

Dyson Supersonic Nural review

Natalie Hemengül
22/7/2024
Translation: Elicia Payne

My favourite hairdryer has had an upgrade. The Supersonic Nural from Dyson promises progress in favour of my scalp and hair health. This is my first impression.

Dyson sent me a test model and allowed me to try it out for two days. Of course, that’s not enough for an extensive review, but it is for a solid first impression.

What’s included:

  • User manual
  • Hairdryer
  • Flyaway attachment
  • Wide-tooth comb
  • Styling nozzle
  • Gentle air attachment
  • Wave+Curl diffusor

What’s new in the Supersonic Nural – and will I like it?

Design, Scalp protect mode and settings

You can read why protecting our scalp is essential for a healthy mane in this interview.

As for the buttons on the transparent plastic, they’re somehow not as as easy to press as the ones on my model.

A breather for me and my device

What’s more, as soon as I put the appliance down, Nural deactivates its heating element. And it minimises the air flow. Pause detect saves energy and gives my ears a little break. It’s a nice extra and certainly more useful for professionals than it is for me.

Attachments and attachment learning

There are two new features here: the styling nozzle, now longer and with a narrower opening, is designed to enable even more precise styling. For me, this means that I can work on larger surface areas. I like it. Then there’s also the Wave+Curl diffusor (a two-piece attachment). The part with the diffuser prongs can be removed magnetically from the base part, which looks like a small bowl. This mechanism means you have two options with the attachment.

For me, on the other hand, attachment learning is a nuisance. The idea behind it is that the attachments save the preferred settings. So when I come to use the same attachment next time, the Nural remembers the airflow and temperature I used last. It’s supposed to save time. In my case, it took me too long to get my head around it. After all, intuition is different for everyone.

In a nutshell

I’m sticking with the simple Supersonic

From a technical perspective, Supersonic Nural is definitely an engineering success. But it’s not my perfect match. For me, it doesn’t have enough relevant innovations for my very simple hairdryer routine. Yes, it’s gentle on my scalp, but I can also create distance between the hairdryer and my scalp myself. Or I can just turn the temperature down. That’s easier than having to consider whether an attachment is compatible with the setting or not. All in all, attachment learning is overkill.

Pause detect is nice-to-have...for a hairdressing salon. I almost never put my hairdryer down when I’m drying my hair. The genius thing is the diffusor which I think will be a real gamechanger for curly hair. But without curly hair, I’ll stick to my down-to-earth Supersonic without sensors.

Pro

  • blow-dries quickly and relatively quietly, as usual with the Supersonic
  • practical pause detection
  • large selection of attachments for various hair types
  • innovative 2-in-1 wave and curl attachment
  • Continuous cold air function

Contra

  • attachment learning (in combination with the scalp protect function) complicates handling
  • people with fine hair buy unnecessary attachments
Header image: Natalie Hemengül

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As a massive Disney fan, I see the world through rose-tinted glasses. I worship series from the 90s and consider mermaids a religion. When I’m not dancing in glitter rain, I’m either hanging out at pyjama parties or sitting at my make-up table. P.S. I love you, bacon, garlic and onions. 


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