A big 2020 set for Sharp with new purifiers, refrigerators & induction cooking
Japanese company Sharp is set to significantly expand their product range in Australia after cutting a deal with Sydney based distributor Tempo.
Among the new range will be kitchen appliances including refrigerators and cuttingedge air purifiers, but at this stage it’s not known whether Sharp Australia or Tempo will sell the new induction cooking gear shown at CES.
Part of the new range was on show at CES 2020, with key retailers telling ChannelNews that they are set to range the new Sharp offerings, which later this year could also include TVs.
This could be a problem for Panasonic, whose current offering is under pressure, with one retailer telling ChannelNews that the Panasonic TV brand could be dropped due to poor sales.
The induction cooktop range, which was shown at CES, is the first time that the Company has shown its new offering.
The company’s product includes Sharp’s first 42 litre, 30-inch Easy Wave microwave oven with dropdown door and built-in convection cooking capability; its Easy Wave IoT microwave drawer with pedestal; its SuperSteam+ superheated steam oven and convection oven that works with Alexa, an app loaded with 48 recipes from the get-go; and its SDW6757ES 24inch dishwasher and SJG2254FS counter-depth refrigerator.
Their new Induction cooking is a technology where heat is generated directly into the cookware, making for less wasted energy.
Safety features on Sharp’s cooktop
Plasmacluster ions destroy odours at the molecular level, even removing embedded odours.
include lockable cooktop controls; and what’s more, cookware must be present for a cooking zone to turn on, which prevents inadvertent turn-ons. Additionally, all cooking zones count down and turn themselves off after 120 minutes.
Sharp's large-room air purifier
Sharp’s exclusively patented Plasmaclusterion technology was also on show at CES and retailers in Australia have already shown a lot of interest in Sharp’s new air purifiers, which are extremely popular overseas.
Their recently updated Plasmaclusterion air purification technology eliminates microscopic pollutants, which traditional filters cannot trap, by replicating nature’s own cleaning process of producing positive and negative ions from water vapour in the air. These ions refresh the air without any harmful chemicals or perfumes.
Plasmacluster ions disperse throughout the room, actively attacking germs, bacteria, viruses, mould and fungus, reaching more than conventional filterbased systems can, according to Sharp executives.
Traditional systems rely on air passing through the filter, but ions can spread to every corner of the room to actively clean.
Plasmacluster ions destroy odours at the molecular level, even removing embedded odours in carpeting, drapery and furniture.
Sharp is tipped to be a major supplier of air purification in Australia when the new range is rolled out.