Pick your poison: Main equivalency!

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What would you pick?

  • Samsung Bespoke AI Jet Ultra: Ultra-powerful, but wasteful and dupe-@$$ and easily expensive

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Dreame Z30: Cheap shot for nice motor, cheap competitor to others

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • SEBO Balance A1: Poor man's Dyson Cyclone V10, made by a now-wrongly praised bagged maker

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Lupe Pure: Anti-stick, cordless that just couldn't sustain it's existence or remaining innovation

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Henry Quick: Bagged, bagged, bagged, bagged and bagged as f#¢k, despite the iconic smiley face

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Dyson V8 (any version): Reliable&light but too cheap+compromised to be able to fully main-equivalent

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • eufy E20: Robot stick that can barely do any job at all except for its space-saving

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Cheap-@$$ knockoffs of advanced stuffs that doesn't do halfway as well as any of the real deal

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    4

Absolute Rainbow

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 8, 2025
Messages
155
Location
Vietnam
We have a bunch of advanced vacuums that has at least one significant flaws that hold them back relative to current perfection, or maybe just greatness at the moment. The choices are in this poll itself.

(Excuse me for the censoring in the options though...)
 
Not on the list, but if I were to get a cordless vacuum, I would get one that fits in my existing tool battery ecosystem (Makita, Milwaukee, Ryobi, etc).

I wouldn't be surprised if those performed worse than some on your poll, but you are already getting inferior performance by choosing cordless anyway, so performance wouldn't be my primary consideration for choosing a cordless. I'd rather just choose from something that doesn't add another expensive and wasteful battery that will lose capacity over time and eventually fail.

*edit* Any reviewers out there that have tested mainstream cordless vacuums vs some of the tool brand ones?
 
Not on the list, but if I were to get a cordless vacuum, I would get one that fits in my existing tool battery ecosystem (Makita, Milwaukee, Ryobi, etc).

I wouldn't be surprised if those performed worse than some on your poll, but you are already getting inferior performance by choosing cordless anyway, so performance wouldn't be my primary consideration for choosing a cordless. I'd rather just choose from something that doesn't add another expensive and wasteful battery that will lose capacity over time and eventually fail.

*edit* Any reviewers out there that have tested mainstream cordless vacuums vs some of the tool brand ones?
Tool brands count towards the "knockoffs" option, the last one. @Hatsuwr, that means you chose the knockoffs. I expect you to vote accordingly.
 
Tool brands count towards the "knockoffs" option, the last one. @Hatsuwr, that means you chose the knockoffs. I expect you to vote accordingly.

Your descriptor of the option is a bit much for me to agree with lol. The poll would have been better without the commentary in the list. There's only one vote so far - maybe remake it?

If you do remake it, I'd add an option for tool brands, and change "knock-off" to other. Also, does Kirby even have a cordless? And why no Dyson Gen5detect or V15 Detect? Any what about Shark? Maybe add their Stratos and PowerDetect.
 
Your descriptor of the option is a bit much for me to agree with lol. The poll would have been better without the commentary in the list. There's only one vote so far - maybe remake it?

If you do remake it, I'd add an option for tool brands, and change "knock-off" to other. Also, does Kirby even have a cordless? And why no Dyson Gen5detect or V15 Detect? Any what about Shark? Maybe add their Stratos and PowerDetect.
NGL, the commentary is unnecessary and EXTREMELY biased.
 
Your descriptor of the option is a bit much for me to agree with lol. The poll would have been better without the commentary in the list. There's only one vote so far - maybe remake it?

If you do remake it, I'd add an option for tool brands, and change "knock-off" to other. Also, does Kirby even have a cordless? And why no Dyson Gen5detect or V15 Detect? Any what about Shark? Maybe add their Stratos and PowerDetect.
V15 Detect are really well-received for a Dyson (your mileage may vary; f#¢k the current state of Dyson's award-winning customer service), and the power trigger wasn't too big of a problem. Gen5 is a refinement and removed the trigger. To be honest, that trigger and the extra weight are medium-level issues, neither minor nor major. I am talking about truly major problems.

@Hatsuwr consider this: any tool brand can make a dupe. That's one reason why tool brands are to be put into the cheap knockoffs. They're mere tools, and should be treated as some dupes that happens to function but not necessarily work like actual proper mains-equivalent cordless stuffs.

Another reason why I had not directly included the Stratos or PowerDetect: there's simply not enough poll choices allowed. The facts that Shark's cordless models all copied Dyson therefore put them in cheap knockoffs category.

Here's the outstanding enough to be dedicated options within that 10-option vote limit:
- Lupe Pure is pretty obvious, because it's a freaking upright. And duping technologies from Dyson as poorly as normally expected for the time, at that. Then Lupe themselves shut down...
- Samsung Bespoke Jet Ultra (and its less powerful and lighter variant, Jet Lite) are wasteful and dupe-@$$. Just look at the shape of the handheld and the main cleaner head, for example. Bulky dual brushrolls (similar to Lupe Pure), with non-powered soft roller and mid brush bar, and questionable sealing and unswept hard floors edges. The shape itself is too front-heavy even for the on-line version of the form factor that Dyson pioneered - heck, the cyclones are still 3-inlets-per-cone, which isn't too good, unlike the truly effective single-inlet-per-cone cyclones Dyson have had since even before the 5,127th prototype was made. Looking at both the old Samsung Jet review by Vacuum Facts himself as well as the RTINGS review of the Jet Ultra, and you can see why. It gets worse no matter which source (Tom's Guide thought the Ultra was perfect though...), so... yeah.
- SEBO Balance A1 looks like a poor man's V10 but likely performs like a dragged-out DC35 Digital Slim. Ditto for Dream Z30 to V15 Detect, with sloppy sensors holding it's holding nice motor back. eufy E20 tried to be both a bagless stick and a robot vac in one package, which splices up- oh no, I simply can't explain how ridiculous the compromises involved are. Henry Quick is bagged, and that enforces running cost and potential landfills, which is not worth the modern standards.
- And the most damning of all and even more obvious than even the Lupe... FACKING KIRBY! I know not all of you will like it, but Vacuum Facts is right about Kirby vacuums. They're too ancient to keep its legendary status at this point, and even ordinary dupes of Dyson's cordless mains-equivalents are able to outperform all Kirby machines in deep cleaning performance and versatility. A hunting bagged, corded trash that only belong to the first half of the 20th century, not the 21st!
- There are two Dysons as dedicated options. Dyson V8 had to catch up and is too cheap to fully allow for mains-equivalent capabilities (V8 Cyclone is the first to at least reliably come close, based on the new specs), whereas Dyson V16 Piston Animal... f#¢k Dyson's current suits for crippling that otherwise legendary machine out of the box! What a tragic mess.
NGL, the commentary is unnecessary and EXTREMELY biased.
Commentary there? What commentary? I was just trying to get you guys to vote.

@royalfan103, I am sorry for the apparent bias, but this is about choosing the very best of some of the worst yet.
 
Commentary there? What commentary? I was just trying to get you guys to vote.

@royalfan103, I am sorry for the apparent bias, but this is about choosing the very best of some of the worst yet.

Crunchy_chip_sweat.png

"Dyson V16 Piston Animal: Advanced and powerful, but crippled by Dyson's newfound design stupidity
Samsung Bespoke AI Jet Ultra: Ultra-powerful, but wasteful and dupe-@$$ and easily expensive
Dreame Z30: Cheap shot for nice motor, cheap competitor to others
SEBO Balance A1: Poor man's Dyson Cyclone V10, made by a now-wrongly praised bagged maker
Lupe Pure: Anti-stick, cordless that just couldn't sustain it's existence or remaining innovation
Henry Quick: Bagged, bagged, bagged, bagged and bagged as f#¢k, despite the iconic smiley face
Dyson V8 (any version): Reliable&light but too cheap+compromised to be able to fully main-equivalent
eufy E20: Robot stick that can barely do any job at all except for its space-saving
Kirby (vacuum): Fallen legend that just doesn't work and doesn't match any modern standards at all
Cheap-@$$ knockoffs of advanced stuffs that doesn't do halfway as well as any of the real deal"

If this ain't unnecessary commentary, IDK what is.
 
View attachment 170218

"Dyson V16 Piston Animal: Advanced and powerful, but crippled by Dyson's newfound design stupidity
Samsung Bespoke AI Jet Ultra: Ultra-powerful, but wasteful and dupe-@$$ and easily expensive
Dreame Z30: Cheap shot for nice motor, cheap competitor to others
SEBO Balance A1: Poor man's Dyson Cyclone V10, made by a now-wrongly praised bagged maker
Lupe Pure: Anti-stick, cordless that just couldn't sustain it's existence or remaining innovation
Henry Quick: Bagged, bagged, bagged, bagged and bagged as f#¢k, despite the iconic smiley face
Dyson V8 (any version): Reliable&light but too cheap+compromised to be able to fully main-equivalent
eufy E20: Robot stick that can barely do any job at all except for its space-saving
Kirby (vacuum): Fallen legend that just doesn't work and doesn't match any modern standards at all
Cheap-@$$ knockoffs of advanced stuffs that doesn't do halfway as well as any of the real deal"

If this ain't unnecessary commentary, IDK what is.
No context is a no go. We needed context to even understand. I sought context from Vacuum Facts and his physics-based knowledge and cordless experience, not his drawn-out explanations. I even tried to follow his infos, though he tends to tell me that I got it wrong. I don't mind being proven wrong, I needed to know stuffs.

I deserves context and I demand it, and you should too. Those so-called commentary you pointed out are actually descriptions - dear @royalfan103, descriptions as to why the options are as such. If I don't explain why these are even options, how would you even know about what you were voting for?

Sooooo... ¯⁠\⁠_⁠(⁠ツ⁠)⁠_⁠/⁠¯
 
It sounds like you may have already identified what you see as the “significant” flaws in each of these vacuums, but the way it’s worded feels a little unclear. It might be more helpful if you listed the specific flaw you see in each one. That way, we can look at them together and either agree or disagree with your assessment, rather than just being told they all have flaws.
 
It sounds like you may have already identified what you see as the “significant” flaws in each of these vacuums, but the way it’s worded feels a little unclear. It might be more helpful if you listed the specific flaw you see in each one. That way, we can look at them together and either agree or disagree with your assessment, rather than just being told they all have flaws.
@encorevacuums let me try to explain...
Dyson V16 Piston Animal: Advanced and powerful, but crippled by Dyson's newfound design stupidity
Dyson V16 Piston Animal (and the Submarine which is the wet-and-dry version) is normally an excellent and superior vacuum. A true mains-equivalent with innovations and advancements that help change the game of floorcare and cleaning, but... emphasis on "normally". This is because V16 is actually crippled out of the box, and has to be modded to work as well as it's meant to be - while thankfully the mod is easy to do, @Vacuum Facts, the one who found that mod, chose to keep withholding the method behind said mod, while the mod itself can threaten the warranty as some have pointed out. Not everyone could identify the problem - some, like TechRadar, blamed the wrong thing: it's not the fault of the new dual-cone head which de-tangles hair flawlessly, and that head's angled front and thin unswept step between the Archimedes-screw cup rollers are neither truly major problems. The real problem was possible thanks to Dyson's stupid oversight that halved the 900W motor down to 450W consumption and severely diminishing cleaning performance down (at least outside of Eco mode, but alas) to dupe-level during actual deep cleaning (Vacuum Facts found the Auto mode of the initial pre-mod V16 to be WORSE than even Dreame Z30 which had worse sensors and more wasteful designs). That ridiculous and unprecedented flaw technically broke the V16, securing a spot as an option in this choose-the best-of-worst poll here. It's a tragic machine because all its innovations are incredible but it's crippled from nailing the basics and has to be modded or revised properly to be able to fly for real. (For those asking, @Vacuum Facts is not a Dyson fanboy, as he absolutely hates how the V16 is launched. I also agreed with him too, not just on that but on many other things such as his own lectures)
Samsung Bespoke AI Jet Ultra: Ultra-powerful, but wasteful and dupe-@$$ and easily expensive
Combine the old Samsung Jet review of the aforementioned Vacuum Facts with the RTINGS review of the Jet Ultra, and you see what it really is at the end of the day: the Jet Ultra is barely a true improvement over the old Jet models even from many years ago. It's far more powerful and have some new generation of their very own motor to compete with Dyson's, but Samsung's design is ultimately wasteful. The dual-brushrolls are bulky and heavy so you cannot easily fit and tuck the head in floor-level crevices and undersides with it, and the soft roller in that dual is neither motor-driven nor edge-to-edge, while the brush bar is very ordinary, so it exhibits all the remaining disadvantages all the same, such as pushing dust down the piles of carpets. RTINGS noted that Samsung wouldn't have any trouble if it wasn't for the head's design, and I'm pretty sure the flaws in the head justifies RTINGS' finding which would definitely be dismissed by Vacuum Facts. If even an unreliable tester (or team of testers) can correctly identify the problem holding the reviewed products back, then there's no more excuse, and in this case Samsung clearly dropped the ball in the long run.

Samsung's form factor is a poorer imitation of the current versions of Dyson's designs, leading to it being too front-heavy and potentially too low of center of gravity as well, even for in-line form factor pioneered by Dyson's revolutionary (Cyclone) V10, so it's only comfortable to hold on floor level due to its grip. In fact, the telescoping wand is LITERALLY the only thing Samsung has over Dyson when it comes to form factor, and even then that was primarily to help make the included self-emptying station less unwieldy and less bulky. That station being included makes up a good chunk of cost, making the Jet Ultra even more expensive than the base versions of any Dyson cordless sticks.
Dreame Z30: Cheap shot for nice motor, cheap competitor to others
This is mostly the same as Samsung, but the biggest design difference is resembling Dyson's in-line versions a bit more, but still quite front-heavy even for said in-line form factor. Like Samsung, Dreame made their own motor too, though they're much closer in airwatts to the V16 than the Jet Ultra. However, they're just as wasteful (@Vacuum Facts want us to look at how badly Dreame's brush bar did, so please watch his review) and the machine itself have seriously inferior sensor, meaning it's not as accurate and not nearly as sensitive. That reduced price tag gives it all away.
SEBO Balance A1: Poor man's Dyson Cyclone V10, made by a now-wrongly praised bagged maker
SEBO nailed the most resemblance to Dyson's in-line versions yet, but not only their specs didn't even match (way less powerful motor, only 48 minutes of max runtime, etc.), but they are minimally cyclonic. Their designs are mid at best, and they're from the same brand that Vacuum Facts himself also dismissed in his respective review as well. This is not a joke - watch his review to see.
Lupe Pure: Anti-stick, cordless that just couldn't sustain it's existence or remaining innovation
Lupe is shut down, so Lupe Pure will remain as it is: an upright gasping for innovation. Similar dual-brushrolls as Samsung, barely cyclonic, and that upright form factor is not versatile or properly lightweight enough. While at the very least it helped introduce a new testing method, but it hardly cleans well in practice, like almost all cordless machines out there.
Henry Quick: Bagged, bagged, bagged, bagged and bagged as f#¢k, despite the iconic smiley face
Henry Quick is a bagged vacuum. And bags incur running cost, is likely to be dumped to landfills, may easily smell, and isn't all that environmentally friendly nor economically friendly. Scent pods gotta be redundant because, again, running cost. Henry's specs are also inferior, corded or cordless.
Dyson V8 (any version): Reliable&light but too cheap+compromised to be able to fully main-equivalent
Dyson's perpendicular form factor is the original shape of the mains-equivalence trend, and Dyson's upgrading to in-line form has (as they've made it clear a few times) changed virtually the entire machine. V8, while cheaper, is more limited, less powerful, less runtime, and less capacity and merely optional (for the most part) HEPA filtration which will have become standard (though Dyson's still sealed whole-machine, as it should be in all their modern machines in general). V8 Cyclone fixes a lot of the flaws and technically make it a new mains-equivalent, but it's still cheap enough that compromises still flooded, just less so than the 2016 original have become compared to the modern competition. Still has lesser capacity.

Oh, and none of the V8 get any version of the dual-cone head, so hair de-tangling is a toss up through the comb vanes in brush bar which would be (and has been) pretty loud and scratching.
eufy E20: Robot stick that can barely do any job at all except for its space-saving
This one is obvious once you have seen it. This is a bonafide cookie-cutter robot vacuum that can be held like a stick vac. Compromises are boundless here.
Kirby (vacuum): Fallen legend that just doesn't work and doesn't match any modern standards at all
Same as eufy but for entirely different reasons - where do I even start? @Vacuum Facts have extensive videos showing how inferior Kirby vacuums are compared to Dyson's mains-equivalent machines - even a V10 blows Kirby out of the water. In fact, I wager that most dupes will be able to perform at least as well as any Kirby vacuum, even the crippled pre-mod V16 above. And Kirby is bagged and corded and HEAVY, for absurdly extra hassle. I know a bunch of you love Kirby, but let me say it. Vacuum Facts was right and is still right: no matter what you think, Kirby is a horrible vacuum cleaner. It's only legendary through the first half of the 20th century but people still clamoring it even in the 21st century. Speechless!
Cheap-@$$ knockoffs of advanced stuffs that doesn't do halfway as well as any of the real deal
This applies to Shark, LG, Vax, and all kinds of tool brands. In other words, virtually EVERY SINGLE COMPETITORS to Dyson that's not presented as dedicated options above, @encorevacuums, meaning it's essentially the "others" options, much to @Hatsuwr 's charging thus far (as of me writing this).

The description is said as in the tin: these are all the knockoffs, dupes and copycats that seriously can't properly compete with Dyson's latest and greatest flagships (currently V15 onwards, as of me writing this s#1t), no matter how good they have been.
 
@encorevacuums let me try to explain...

Dyson V16 Piston Animal (and the Submarine which is the wet-and-dry version) is normally an excellent and superior vacuum. A true mains-equivalent with innovations and advancements that help change the game of floorcare and cleaning, but... emphasis on "normally". This is because V16 is actually crippled out of the box, and has to be modded to work as well as it's meant to be - while thankfully the mod is easy to do, @Vacuum Facts, the one who found that mod, chose to keep withholding the method behind said mod, while the mod itself can threaten the warranty as some have pointed out. Not everyone could identify the problem - some, like TechRadar, blamed the wrong thing: it's not the fault of the new dual-cone head which de-tangles hair flawlessly, and that head's angled front and thin unswept step between the Archimedes-screw cup rollers are neither truly major problems. The real problem was possible thanks to Dyson's stupid oversight that halved the 900W motor down to 450W consumption and severely diminishing cleaning performance down (at least outside of Eco mode, but alas) to dupe-level during actual deep cleaning (Vacuum Facts found the Auto mode of the initial pre-mod V16 to be WORSE than even Dreame Z30 which had worse sensors and more wasteful designs). That ridiculous and unprecedented flaw technically broke the V16, securing a spot as an option in this choose-the best-of-worst poll here. It's a tragic machine because all its innovations are incredible but it's crippled from nailing the basics and has to be modded or revised properly to be able to fly for real. (For those asking, @Vacuum Facts is not a Dyson fanboy, as he absolutely hates how the V16 is launched. I also agreed with him too, not just on that but on many other things such as his own lectures)

Combine the old Samsung Jet review of the aforementioned Vacuum Facts with the RTINGS review of the Jet Ultra, and you see what it really is at the end of the day: the Jet Ultra is barely a true improvement over the old Jet models even from many years ago. It's far more powerful and have some new generation of their very own motor to compete with Dyson's, but Samsung's design is ultimately wasteful. The dual-brushrolls are bulky and heavy so you cannot easily fit and tuck the head in floor-level crevices and undersides with it, and the soft roller in that dual is neither motor-driven nor edge-to-edge, while the brush bar is very ordinary, so it exhibits all the remaining disadvantages all the same, such as pushing dust down the piles of carpets. RTINGS noted that Samsung wouldn't have any trouble if it wasn't for the head's design, and I'm pretty sure the flaws in the head justifies RTINGS' finding which would definitely be dismissed by Vacuum Facts. If even an unreliable tester (or team of testers) can correctly identify the problem holding the reviewed products back, then there's no more excuse, and in this case Samsung clearly dropped the ball in the long run.

Samsung's form factor is a poorer imitation of the current versions of Dyson's designs, leading to it being too front-heavy and potentially too low of center of gravity as well, even for in-line form factor pioneered by Dyson's revolutionary (Cyclone) V10, so it's only comfortable to hold on floor level due to its grip. In fact, the telescoping wand is LITERALLY the only thing Samsung has over Dyson when it comes to form factor, and even then that was primarily to help make the included self-emptying station less unwieldy and less bulky. That station being included makes up a good chunk of cost, making the Jet Ultra even more expensive than the base versions of any Dyson cordless sticks.

This is mostly the same as Samsung, but the biggest design difference is resembling Dyson's in-line versions a bit more, but still quite front-heavy even for said in-line form factor. Like Samsung, Dreame made their own motor too, though they're much closer in airwatts to the V16 than the Jet Ultra. However, they're just as wasteful (@Vacuum Facts want us to look at how badly Dreame's brush bar did, so please watch his review) and the machine itself have seriously inferior sensor, meaning it's not as accurate and not nearly as sensitive. That reduced price tag gives it all away.

SEBO nailed the most resemblance to Dyson's in-line versions yet, but not only their specs didn't even match (way less powerful motor, only 48 minutes of max runtime, etc.), but they are minimally cyclonic. Their designs are mid at best, and they're from the same brand that Vacuum Facts himself also dismissed in his respective review as well. This is not a joke - watch his review to see.

Lupe is shut down, so Lupe Pure will remain as it is: an upright gasping for innovation. Similar dual-brushrolls as Samsung, barely cyclonic, and that upright form factor is not versatile or properly lightweight enough. While at the very least it helped introduce a new testing method, but it hardly cleans well in practice, like almost all cordless machines out there.

Henry Quick is a bagged vacuum. And bags incur running cost, is likely to be dumped to landfills, may easily smell, and isn't all that environmentally friendly nor economically friendly. Scent pods gotta be redundant because, again, running cost. Henry's specs are also inferior, corded or cordless.

Dyson's perpendicular form factor is the original shape of the mains-equivalence trend, and Dyson's upgrading to in-line form has (as they've made it clear a few times) changed virtually the entire machine. V8, while cheaper, is more limited, less powerful, less runtime, and less capacity and merely optional (for the most part) HEPA filtration which will have become standard (though Dyson's still sealed whole-machine, as it should be in all their modern machines in general). V8 Cyclone fixes a lot of the flaws and technically make it a new mains-equivalent, but it's still cheap enough that compromises still flooded, just less so than the 2016 original have become compared to the modern competition. Still has lesser capacity.

Oh, and none of the V8 get any version of the dual-cone head, so hair de-tangling is a toss up through the comb vanes in brush bar which would be (and has been) pretty loud and scratching.

This one is obvious once you have seen it. This is a bonafide cookie-cutter robot vacuum that can be held like a stick vac. Compromises are boundless here.

Same as eufy but for entirely different reasons - where do I even start? @Vacuum Facts have extensive videos showing how inferior Kirby vacuums are compared to Dyson's mains-equivalent machines - even a V10 blows Kirby out of the water. In fact, I wager that most dupes will be able to perform at least as well as any Kirby vacuum, even the crippled pre-mod V16 above. And Kirby is bagged and corded and HEAVY, for absurdly extra hassle. I know a bunch of you love Kirby, but let me say it. Vacuum Facts was right and is still right: no matter what you think, Kirby is a horrible vacuum cleaner. It's only legendary through the first half of the 20th century but people still clamoring it even in the 21st century. Speechless!

This applies to Shark, LG, Vax, and all kinds of tool brands. In other words, virtually EVERY SINGLE COMPETITORS to Dyson that's not presented as dedicated options above, @encorevacuums, meaning it's essentially the "others" options, much to @Hatsuwr 's charging thus far (as of me writing this).

The description is said as in the tin: these are all the knockoffs, dupes and copycats that seriously can't properly compete with Dyson's latest and greatest flagships (currently V15 onwards, as of me writing this s#1t), no matter how good they have been.
(cont.)





@encorevacuums... and that's my very long explanation, and that's with the assistance of Vacuum Facts' own channel! I did state that each model involved in this poll have at least one significant flaw, with many of the dedicated options having multiples. I voted for Dyson V16 in this best-of-worst poll because it's the absolute best of the nine-plus, with Dyson V8 a close second, with V16 being a tragic paraplegic in terms of cleaning performance, at least at launch out-of-the-box, and I really hope Dyson get their acts up and revise the dang V16 so nobody have to mod their launch-day "garbage" again. This is @Vacuum Facts being objective, and neither I nor him are or have been Dyson fanboys. I'm just someone who's amazed at the cordless mains-equivalent stuffs instead. As for the rest... remember this: your mileage may vary.

God dang it, @encorevacuums! 10,000 characters limit again!
 
I have a big loud Kirby. It's not my favorite vacuum but I would much rather use it than anything else mentioned on the list. We also have a Kenmore 600 Series "Pop-N-Go" canister, the purple 81614 flavor, and it I could only have one vacuum that would be it.
 

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