blackheart
Well-known member
Ha! I like that scale. Would have been a good sales tool.
Many years ago my old local vacuum store had a suction meter similar to this shop down below. I remember back in 2012, my buddy showed me a demonstration between a Panasonic Platinum QuietForce MC-UG729 to a Sanitaire S645 Type A, it was a night and day difference. The Panasonic I think got a mixture of SORRY and POOR ratings while the Sanitaire went all the way up to the WOW rating. Despite that test, I still like the Panasonic more than the Sanitaire. I don't know who made those suction meters but I'd love to find one to play around with just for fun. I may not care much about the actual numbers but something like that meter gives me a better idea of just how much airflow any machine has on the nozzle.
Miserable to dust with? That's crazy talk. 120 hose CFM picks up dust fabulously. And suction barely matters as I have conclusively proven since 2017 on my YouTube channel.Try using a Kirby on the hose to dust with. Miserable. It doesn't pick anything up. 30 inches of sealed suction for my Avalir 2.
Have a look at his video from Vacuum Wars where they test a selection of direct air and clean air commercial uprights. The Sanitaire Tradition had the highest airflow by far, but they have low sealed suction compared to the clean air machines. Not seeing the test you refer to I can't comment on the nature of the test procedure, how they measured sealed suction on a direct air vacuum with no hose, the test equipment used or the condition of the vacuums tested. This Vacuum Wars test is a test of new vacuums. My only criticism is the anemometer they use is not accurate, it reads overly high airflows, but for comparing machines it is acceptable.
I have a Hushtone and like it except for the lack of a synthetic HEPA dust bag. I have been fooling around with other kinds of HEPA dust bags to see what might fit the Hoover mount. Stay tuned.
All I am saying is that you are using an inaccurate anemometer to measure airflow. It is giving a false high reading because it is calculating airflow based on the diameter of that fan, which is larger than the diameter of any opening on any vacuum except for shop vacs with 2 inch hoses.Ohhhh boy, dude. Re-read my statement:
Today at 8:55 AM #24
Here's my fully measured TriStar CXL. It does have a 10-Amp motor in it though.
That's not the original motor! The original motor (6 Amps) would be MUCH weaker obviously.
Wanna see what a central vacuum grade motor (12 Amps) can do in an old canister? Check this out:
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