Since all of you love various vaccuums, I wonder if it started with helping with vacuuming in your childhood home, or did you just see something interesting and want to take it apart to see how it worked?
A smidge over that. Probably closer to 250. Once I figured out how to buy and import vacuums from Japan I got a little out of control.And how many do you have now? 200?
It started with me going up to my mom's old Fold Away when I was 2 and then getting inspired by another vacuum collector years later (2013).Since all of you love various vaccuums, I wonder if it started with helping with vacuuming in your childhood home, or did you just see something interesting and want to take it apart to see how it worked?
Mr. Vacmaster.Who was that other collector?
Mr. Vacmaster.
Unfortunately, his channel’s gone now.
Help me figure it out, then you wont need to buy so manyA smidge over that. Probably closer to 250. Once I figured out how to buy and import vacuums from Japan I got a little out of control.
Playing with my Grt grandma's Electrolux Golden Jubilee and riding it around, watching it explode in a fireball when the motor died when my mom was vacuuming in the 90s. My mom had a Eureka World Vac then came the visit from the dreaded Kirby salesman. So I have a liking to Electrolux and Kirby products because of that.Since all of you love various vaccuums, I wonder if it started with helping with vacuuming in your childhood home, or did you just see something interesting and want to take it apart to see how it worked?
Oh, I wasn’t talking about that vacmaster. It was a different vacmaster. The first vacuum collecter I saw.Vacmasterthegreat? He's still around. I just seen his channel yesterday. He deleted the username and changed it. I never knew it was him either until I seen the name. Looks like he's selling his vacuums and moving on.
https://www.youtube.com/@S15collector
Join a Japan based proxy buying service called Buyee.jp. Their website gives you access to hundreds of on-line retailers in Japan as well as a couple of their on line flea markets like Mercari and JDirectItems Auctions. They also have access to JDirectItems Shopping and Rakuten where you can buy new vacuums and new parts for your Japanese vacuum. You join much like you would join Amazon or ebay. Once you have your account and password set up you shop the different sites. When you see something you like you click to buy it and Buyee buys it for you. They are your proxy in Japan. The service charges are very minimal and because of the Dollar-Yen relationship everything in Japan is very inexpensive.Help me figure it out, then you wont need to buy so many![]()
No, they all got taken down sometime in 2023 or 2020. Maybe even 2018 or earlier?That is a shame. Do you know if his videos are still on Youtube?
Yeah that's too much work and BS, forget it. When I buy on Mercari you are shown everything all at once and Mercari does all that. No tariffs or having to proxy or consolidate shipping couriers, its all included in the item cost on the site. One click and it's ordered and they do all of that. But Mercari doesnt sell vacuums. I use it to get diecast cars from Japan that USA doesn't get.Join a Japan based proxy buying service called Buyee.jp. Their website gives you access to hundreds of on-line retailers in Japan as well as a couple of their on line flea markets like Mercari and JDirectItems Auctions. They also have access to JDirectItems Shopping and Rakuten where you can buy new vacuums and new parts for your Japanese vacuum. You join much like you would join Amazon or ebay. Once you have your account and password set up you shop the different sites. When you see something you like you click to buy it and Buyee buys it for you. They are your proxy in Japan. The service charges are very minimal and because of the Dollar-Yen relationship everything in Japan is very inexpensive.
After you select something and Buyee buys it the product is shipped to their warehouse in Osaka. You get an email notification of its arrival and you have 30 days of free storage. You can arrange to ship the product to the US immediately or if the items you are buying are small you can have them consolidate several packages into a single shipment. Shipping to the US has typically not been more expensive than shipping a vacuum across the US with UPS except for some heavy steel body Electroluxes and Tristars. The Japanese vacuums are small and very light so shipping is no big deal.
What has become a big deal are the tariffs. The shipper will email you for a tariff payment when the package hits US customs plus there will be a fee for the customs broker ( the only people really making money off these tariffs, business is booming for them ). As a result I am not buying so much from Japan now. I am stocked up on bags and crossing my fingers that the Supremes rule Jupiter's tariffs ( Jupiter is the largest planet in our solar system, an orange colored gas giant ) are not legal.
The Japanese version of Mercari is very different from what you get in the US. The Japanese site sells used merchandise and it a lot like ebay.Yeah that's too much work and BS, forget it. When I buy on Mercari you are shown everything all at once and Mercari does all that. No tariffs or having to proxy or consolidate shipping couriers, its all included in the item cost on the site. One click and it's ordered and they do all of that. But Mercari doesnt sell vacuums. I use it to get diecast cars from Japan that USA doesn't get.
Also last time I imported something from Canada in July 2025 I had to pay $50 in tarrifs for 28 year old computer parts. There are people getting hit with $400 in tarrifs for importing clothes from Japan. If I do not know the entire price and fees all at once before bidding, no sale.
That is one (only one tank) of mine too.Oh, I see. Interesting to hear about the fish tank things as that is my secondary hobby.