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Best Vacuum Cleaner |
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| Apr23-10, 12:07 PM | #1 |
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Best Vacuum Cleaner
Need a vacuum cleaner? My wife just brought home a new Miele and test-drove it. She loves it. We have bought and maintained lots of vacuums over the past ~30 years, and none of them performed all that well - even the top-end Electroluxes.
A co-worker of hers used to sell and service Mieles and he highly recommended the line. He went to his former boss and negotiated a price of $472.50 (tax included) for a Miele S318 (available only from Miele Diamond Dealers). We paid with a check, and when my wife found out that the S318 was white, she asked if there was another color available. Her co-worker asked the owner if there was another color available, and he upgraded her to a Miele Blue Moon (S5001) at no additional cost. It's a discontinued model, but brand new and top of the line. I looked them up on-line, and even with discounts, they retailed for over $1000. ![]() Edit: Here's about the cheapest one I found. We have the standard floor head with retractable brush, the standard crevice, dusting, and upholstery heads, and the Mini Turbo brush, all for less than half price. http://www.allbrands.com/products/abp09594.html Nice features include a cord that retracts easily, but with a very light spring loading that doesn't stress the cord, multiple power settings for heavy-to-light jobs, four stable 360 deg swivel wheels so that it moves with a light touch, extendable wand with a thumb-actuated bypass that allows you to bleed off vacuum for even more control when vacuuming curtains, etc. Best of all, the discharge filter meets European HEPA standards (0.3 micron, IIR) so that dust mites, their feces, pollen, etc doesn't get discharged back into the air. Even on the highest power setting, the vacuum's noise level is reasonable. Too soon to tell about durability, of course, but the performance is great. Also, the fellow that brokered the deal for us was the service-man for that All-Vacuum business for years, and he claims that Miele vacuums needed service far less frequently than Electrolux, Hoover, Bissel, Rainbow, etc, and that Miele had standardized on the motors, fans, etc making service simpler, with very short turn-around times. |
| Apr23-10, 12:22 PM | #2 |
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Mentor
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Kirby is probably the most powerful vacuum you can get, my ex bought me one, but it was SO POWERFUL, that it was a pain to move, it would actually raise the carpet up off the floor where ever you went. Being made of steel, the thing weighed a ton too. Hated it.
I have a Hoover now that has one of those sensors that see dust and the light stays red until the amount of debris being sucked up reaches a satisfactory level. The first time Evo Child used it she told me it was the best vaccum she'd ever used, she was gushing about how clean the carpet looked, and the self propel feature means you can push it with your little finger. |
| Apr23-10, 12:26 PM | #3 |
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My former boss' wife had a Kirby, and it was like a dressed-up shop-vac. His wife is a small woman and though the vacuum was OK to handle on bare floors (wood, tile), she had to wrestle with it when doing the carpeted rooms. They bought an Electrolux for the upstairs rooms because the Kirby was such a beast to move.
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| Apr23-10, 12:44 PM | #4 |
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Best Vacuum Cleaner
Kirby was the first upright to use a full-sized motor - almost as big as one might find in a canister vac. Today, almost all uprights use high-current motors. Kirbies are far too expensive for what you get [you can pay a over $2000 for one, which is ridiculous], and yes, far too heavy for many people. While in college, I worked in a vacuum shop. I came away believing that Filter Queen is probably the best canister vac. The reason being that the cone-shaped filter, and the cyclonic action [the first to use it] helps to maintain air flow when partially filled. Also, they were the first to use filters good to a few microns. In fact, the product line was first sold as an air filter, not a vacuum cleaner! Miele and Electrolux are also very good. Rainbows are a joke. We made a small fortune rebuilding their torched motors. Water and electricity don't get along well. But you can pay over $2000 for one of these as well. Beyond that, water will not filter all fine dust. Some types of dust, and ash from woodstoves [common around here], pass right through the water filter as if it wasn't there.
If a Rainbow salesman ever shows up at your door, tell him you want to knock the thing over while it's running and leave it there for a minute. The water goes right into the motor! Poof! |
| Apr23-10, 01:47 PM | #6 |
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The idea that cyclonic action alone can remove all fine dust is pretty hard to believe. Do they make any specific claims about the filtration efficiency? |
| Apr23-10, 02:34 PM | #7 |
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We still have the Electrolux, but it has been moved out to the garage. When we need to vacuum out the vehicles or pick up messes in the garage, it will be there, at the ready. |
| Apr23-10, 03:28 PM | #8 |
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Btw, turbo, you might appreciate this. I did so many Rainbow rebuilds that I could do one with my eyes closed. If you look at their construction, you will see that this was no small feat. But these things came in almost every day. With that and rebuilds from trade-ins, of which he had a moutain behind the store, I probably rebuilt at least a thousand of them. I think I got $25 a piece, and I could rebuild one in about thirty minutes. So thanks to all of the die-hard Rainbow lovers who helped to fund my education.
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| Apr23-10, 03:53 PM | #9 |
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While I took Duke for a walk this afternoon, my wife ran the Miele through a few more paces, and she is loving this machine! We both have respiratory problems and allergies, so the European HEPA certification is no small thing for us. With an active dog bringing in dirt and dust, and our reliance on wood-heat, it's nice to have a vacuum that will handle the "small" stuff. She used the "dust brush" on the CRT TV this afternoon, and the glass is so clean that it looks like it was wiped down with a micro-fiber cleaning cloth (our usual dusting tools for hard surfaces). The crevice tool did a heck of a job on the disk drives of my PC, too. It's hard to believe that such a compact cannister vac (Miele calls it a "full sized") can be so powerful. It puts our old Electroluxes to shame and is much easier to use. My mother used to have an old Electrolux on wire skids, and my wife and I have had several with combinations of skids and wheels, etc. The Miele has 4 wheels on 360 deg casters, and it follows you around so easily that you don't know that you're towing it. Her co-worker, who used to sell and service these, claims that with normal use, Mieles can be expected to last ~30 years or so. As long as the switches and electronics hold up, I believe that he is right. Very solid build, powerful and quiet (a good measure of close-tolerance construction). |
| Apr23-10, 03:55 PM | #10 |
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| Apr23-10, 04:21 PM | #11 |
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| Apr24-10, 02:55 AM | #12 |
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Oh, BTW, the $472.50 price included 3 boxes (5 ea) of vacuum bags that probably retail for around $60 total. I didn't realize this until a little while ago, when looking at the place where the vacuum is stored. There must be one heck of a mark-up on vacuum cleaners to allow the owner of the store to give us such a deal on this cannister vac.
I talked to my wife's co-worker a couple of days ago and asked how he could get such a good deal on the S318 (the original goal) and he said that his former boss and his boss' father (who owns a much larger store in Portland) bought 300 S318s a couple of years ago, and only had about 10 left in stock. The upgrade to the Blue Moon model was a nice surprise, since we would have been very satisfied with the S318 at this price. |
| Apr24-10, 02:58 AM | #13 |
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Nilfisk rocks. True HEPA, used by NASA
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| Apr24-10, 03:09 AM | #14 |
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| Apr24-10, 07:20 AM | #15 |
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I have a great Hoover, with handy attachments for pet hair, that work really well. I only have 2 rooms with carpet and vacuum once a week. Like Evo's, mine has the dirt sensor and very good over all performance.
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| Apr24-10, 10:44 AM | #16 |
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Recognitions:
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Dysons don't do so well in consumer guide tests because against a completely fresh empty bag they aren't that much better. But compared to a typical haven't changed the bag for months type usage they are great. The newer ones also have a HEPA filter |
| Apr24-10, 12:49 PM | #17 |
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We aren't talking about a centrifuge here. PS, mgb, I started to edit your post by accident. It should be the same as posted now. |
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