Vacuum Cleaners Discussions |
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retardturtle1
Joined: May 16, 2009
Points: 358
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Re: Carpet shampooers
Reply #1 Jan 28, 2010 5:58 pm |
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I plan to re-open my vacuum shop & need to know which shampooers to buy. Since I hear that Hoover Steam Vac SpinScrub (NOT the Dirt Devil Easy Steamer style) is better than its competitors, I'm not sure whether to get the Classic or Platinum? I know the Bissell ProHeat & Royal/Dirt Devil are junk & the Rug Doctor doesn't scrub the carpet good enough like the XXX & Hoover do. Extractor type - Hoover Steam Vac SpinScrub w/Clean Surge
- Hoover Platinum or XXX R/C Steam Vac
- XXX Duo Power (Hoover Dual V)
Scrubber/polisher type - Aerus/Lux Floor Pro
- Koblenz Cleaning Machine
- Hoover FloorMAX (or Floor-A-Matic)
- Oreck Orbiter
Hooverman
At the shop i work at..we sell the Hvr spin scrub with nothing but praises...have proven to be very reliable as we also use them as our rental units...so you can imagine the abuse they take. I also own one and love it. But ive also heard some great things about the rug dr.....that it cleans better ..removes more water from the carpets...ect. would like to try one out and test it tho. Bissells are a nightmare to work on....seem to be the most problematic ...break down..fall apart ...well 'at least the ones that come to the shop. Wish you the very best on your vac shop. turtle1
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Severus
If my vacuum can remove even one spec of dirt that yours misses, then mine is better than yours - even if there's no proof that mine would have picked up as much dirt as yours...
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 397
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Re: Carpet shampooers
Reply #2 Jan 28, 2010 6:35 pm |
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The rug doctor has the Carpet and Rug Institute seal of approval - at the gold level. Tested and Approved for Superior Cleaning by the Carpet and Rug Institute Rug Doctor's already superior deep cleaning system now has the prestigious Gold certification from the national trade association for the carpet and rug industry - the Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI). Because of CRI's rigorous testing and stringent standards, only 10% of all submissions receive certification within the three passing levels - bronze, silver, or gold. Although the majority of consumer carpet cleaner manufacturers have submitted machines to CRI, Rug Doctor® was the first consumer and commercial-use machine to earn CRI certification. Today Rug Doctor is still the only carpet cleaning system for home use with the Gold certification from CRI.* The CRI Gold certification means that this is a superior, professional-grade carpet cleaning system. The Gold logo represents a thorough and rigorous testing process by the independent third-party lab that sets the highest standards in the carpet cleaning industry. As of 03/2007
The smart tyrant writes his own story to ensure that it is favorable. The lazy will repeat lines from the book without fact checking.
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Re: Carpet shampooers
Reply #8 Jan 29, 2010 7:04 am |
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The rug doctor has the Carpet and Rug Institute seal of approval - at the gold level. Tested and Approved for Superior Cleaning by the Carpet and Rug InstituteRug Doctor's already superior deep cleaning system now has the prestigious Gold certification from the national trade association for the carpet and rug industry - the Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI). Because of CRI's rigorous testing and stringent standards, only 10% of all submissions receive certification within the three passing levels - bronze, silver, or gold. Although the majority of consumer carpet cleaner manufacturers have submitted machines to CRI, Rug Doctor® was the first consumer and commercial-use machine to earn CRI certification. Today Rug Doctor is still the only carpet cleaning system for home use with the Gold certification from CRI.* The CRI Gold certification means that this is a superior, professional-grade carpet cleaning system. The Gold logo represents a thorough and rigorous testing process by the independent third-party lab that sets the highest standards in the carpet cleaning industry. As of 03/2007 Hello SEVERUS: To my knowledge at least 2 retailers carry and sell this brand now with a model ideal for home use: Kohl's and COSTCO. Usually retails for $400-$600 and always a sale on them. Impressive machine. Competes with a pervasive number of authorized retailers who rent these by the day along with selling all the different solutions. Rental users tend to return these in terrible shape and the retailers put out for rent w/o always scoping out/servicing properly after return. More reason to buy/own your own.
This message was modified Jan 29, 2010 by CarmineD
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Venson
Joined: Jul 23, 2007
Points: 1900
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Re: Carpet shampooers
Reply #10 Jan 29, 2010 1:40 pm |
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but $200 is too expensive for me to buy an Electrolux used from eBay (my parents paid that much for new one back in 1970) why so expensive? Considering the price of a new one, $200 is realtively reasonable as long as shipping fees are low or non-existent. Rug shampooers are not used daily but a few times at most during the year except by those who want to polish floors as well. Nonetheless, I'd say the war and tear factor is substantially less with reasonable use and care.
It's a new world. $200 now stands as no money and there are few new good electrical devices, other than small appliances, that you can buy with it. Venson
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