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[Closed] Vacuum cleaner world

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[#9467871]

New vacuum recommendations please, we've got a wee Vax thing that struggles on our cheap carpets. Need something better that actually picks up fluff and other small items.
Ta 🙂


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 6:17 pm
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Doesn't this get asked at least once a month?

Usual answers are Miele, Sebo, Dyson.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 7:44 pm
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henry


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 7:52 pm
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Henry


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 7:55 pm
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Henry or George if you've got pets.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 7:56 pm
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And the answer, again, is Sebo


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 7:58 pm
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Dyson cordless. Game changer.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 8:06 pm
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Once more sebo


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 8:28 pm
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Sebo if you like uprights that work.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 8:51 pm
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Bought a Miele last weekend which has silly amounts of suction, it lifts the carpets and I have to use both arms on the highest setting.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 8:53 pm
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We havent long bought a Shark, mrs h thinks it great, that'll do for me.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 8:57 pm
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carpet = rotating beating head if you want it clean and the carpet pile brushed.
Bagged cleaner with proper filters best.

Sebo X series ideal.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 9:03 pm
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Sebo. Again.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 9:09 pm
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Sebo's appear to be £300 and Henrys £120.

Mmm its a toughy.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 9:51 pm
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For any kind of 'white goods' you must have a Miele apparently. Aren't we all so STW.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 10:17 pm
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 10:19 pm
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Apologies if this does get asked loads, I should have checked first. I'll look into all brands suggested. Cheers


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 10:19 pm
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All brands? Miele and Miele then. The rest are drowned out by the Miele brothers.

Miele.


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 10:21 pm
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You can't do this with your fancy miele

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 31/07/2017 10:24 pm
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100% Henry....


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 7:43 am
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When our Dyson broke (10 years, so a reasonable innings) my wife went leftfield, and ordered a G-Tech rechargeable.

Seems good so far. Came with an upright and a handheld, both cordless. Time will tell as to reliability...


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 8:55 am
 Earl
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James

Like a Henry but with less bells and whistles.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 9:21 am
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Henry every time, they just go on and on.

If you fancy a Dyson just nip into your local appliance repair shop and have a look at the herd of sorry-looking Dysons standing there like giraffes, waiting for spare parts and you'll drop the idea.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 9:31 am
 sv
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Not Henry! Top heavy, easily gets caught on corners/furniture etc, the cuff that connects to the metal pipe sections keeps slipping and eventually breaks. Our old Dyson was much better, had a motor replacement(ebay £20) after 5 years and is now the garage vacuum cleaner (probably been out there 3-4 years.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 9:49 am
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Former Dyson owner here, now 100% Henry. The AK47 of cleaners.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 9:52 am
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Henry and a James here 🙂


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 10:01 am
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Henry. He's like the Orange Five of the hoover world.

Except not very expensive.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 10:12 am
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Aren't you supposed to use bags with a Henry, seems a bit of a faff? I think Dysons are way overpriced but good nonetheless. My previous Dyson upright lasted 10+ years (gave it away in the end, it was still working fine). Swapped to a cordless one which is great (but stupidly expensive), probably not so good if you have a large house and want to vacuum it all at once. For me though I have a small house + I find with the cordless rather than see vacuuming as a "once a week do the whole house" thing I do the living room/hall much more often as it's just so quick/convenient if you see dirt on the carpet.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 10:21 am
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OP "Vax thing that struggles on our cheap carpets"

Unless the cleaner has a moving beating head it will struggle,
an upright cleaner is usually required for carpets.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 10:22 am
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Our old Dyson was much better, had a motor replacement(ebay £20) after 5 years and is now the garage vacuum cleaner (probably been out there 3-4 years.

I'm the exact opposite - had 4 Dysons over the years from the dc4? To the animal, all have had issues, broken parts repeated, got blocked easily etc. Had a Henry for two years now, it cost less to buy than some of the Dyson parts and other than the bags (big box for less than £10), had nothing spent on it. The suction power is, IMO, much better than the Dyson. Yes it's cumbersome, doest have lots of accessories or look like a 1970s sifi robot, but it just works, 100% of the time.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 10:24 am
 Drac
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Aren't you supposed to use bags with a Henry, seems a bit of a faff?

It takes less than a minute to swap the bag over. I've never thought of it as a faff.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 10:29 am
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Aren't you supposed to use bags with a Henry, seems a bit of a faff?

Yes, every 6 months or so I informed by Mrs. Jay that the 'hoover' has become very heavy and isn't sucking anymore - this is the point I must resist the urge to ask if it's gotten married.

Replacing the bag is a very unfafy 90 second job, sometimes I have to drag lumps of hair out of the bit that the hose connects too, which I don't like but as it'll be 6 months before I do it again, I get over it.

Obviously as this is the internet I'm going to be a bit of a dick and compare the Dyson unfavourably against it.

With it's 1.6l capacity you'll be emptying your Dyson a lot more than your 9l Henry / George (although that both come in various sizes the Numatic ones are much bigger as a rule) and yes the Dyson is very clever and you just have to aim it over the bin and pull the trigger - ours would usually need to have lumps dragged out of it by hand.

Bags are £7 for 10 in Supermarkets or Argos, about 5 years worth at the rate we use them - if you don't like the idea of ecological cost of brown paper and cardboard you can use an aftermarket reusable cloth bag.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 10:36 am
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every 6 months or so I informed by Mrs. Jay that the 'hoover' has become very heavy and isn't sucking anymore

Haha, my wife does exactly the same thing, bless her.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 10:41 am
 IHN
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We have a dog. We have a Dyson.

Our cleaners (yeah, whatever, shoot me) bring a Henry, it's crap and doesn't pick up the dog hairs, so we've asked them to use our Dyson instead, which does.

And it's about eight years old and we've never had any problems with it.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 10:41 am
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P-Jay - Member
every 6 months or so I informed by Mrs. Jay that the 'hoover' has become very heavy and isn't sucking anymore - this is the point I must resist the urge to ask if it's gotten married.

😀


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 11:51 am
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And it's about eight years old and we've never had any problems with it.

The cleaner or the vac?

We had one of those Vax with the pet hair filter. That was awesome and coped with a Newfoundland


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 1:35 pm
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That was awesome and coped with a Newfoundland

Must be pretty powerful to pick one of those up.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 2:26 pm
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Dysons are an absolutely genius marketing trick; they are heavy, expensive, unreliable, ugly and ridiculously over-complicated yet people buy them for the simple reason that you see the dirt you've collected and feel good about it. Human nature loves a big effect for minimal effort and humans will even go as far as vacuuming the floor if rewarded enough.

Meanwhile Mr Dyson lives in his mansion in Gloucestershire with 50 permanent staff to look after the house and garden and ensure his and his family's security from kidnap.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 2:36 pm
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I recently tried to hoover out my car with a friend's Dyson V6.
I gave up, it didn't have enough 'sook'

I have a Harry (Henry with a pet filter) that is good, but I do understand the issues about bulk/carting it about - as I live in a small flat.

I'd be quite keen on getting another battery powered one for convenience and quick day to day hoovering. I have laminate floors so don't need anything super duper - been eyeing up the Vax ones that they have on sale on their outlet site (often through a link on MSE) for about £50-60

But TBH, I just use a brush and a dustpan since I am too poor to own two vacuums


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 2:45 pm
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Can I add a question to this? Steam mops. Any recommendations? For a mix of tiled floors and wooden floorboards, with two small children constantly making a mess!


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 2:54 pm
 IHN
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Dysons are an absolutely genius marketing trick; they are heavy

Ours is, granted, my parents have one of the smaller ones and it isn't, indeed that's why they bought it.

, expensive,

Cos Miele and Sebo are cheap.

unreliable,

Ours isn't

ugly

As opposed to all those other good-looking vacuunm cleaners. And anyway, who cares?

ridiculously over-complicated

I turn it on, it sucks dirt up, I turn it off when I'm finished. Emptying it involves pushing two buttons. What's complicated?


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 3:02 pm
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Late to the party again, but as I'm here then I'll just add that having owned a Dyson, & still an owner of a Henry & a Sebo I must say that the Henry stays in the garage & cleans that & the cars only, or gets to clean up mega mess in the house if minor or major demolition has occurred, usually followed by the Sebo to do the final clean of the fine dust the Henry leaves behind, they are industrial & virtually indestructible but they are a blunt tool & a really not that powerful if you use the bags.


 
Posted : 01/08/2017 9:11 pm
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They had the Dyson robot in Currys last weekend.Looked impressive but over £700


 
Posted : 09/11/2017 9:08 am
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kenny smells spammy


 
Posted : 09/11/2017 9:13 am
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