SEARS is selling the Progressive Glide for $149 on sale. Perhaps the one and only review has some clues to the reason.
http://www.sears.com/shc/s/p_10153_12605_02030100000P?prdNo=1#reviewsWrap
Carmine D.
Ola Carmine,
Thanks I read the review. As before in my books, being what it is, I can see the Glide in use in small homes and apartments where it might serve, lending a sense of thoroughness because of the "big" motor, as sole vacuum for not overly fussy or trendy-type housekeepers. It might also serve as a high-powered supplementary vac in larger homes that already have full-size vacuums for regular duty.
Nonetheless, as it is an old idea that's been done long before, this vacuum is not supposed to have attachments. It's predecessors didn't either. Whether Hoover, Regina, Shetland or Bissell lightweights, with the add on of power nozzles their power was assumed a near to regular upright machines for rug cleaning and that's all they were intended to do -- clean rugs and maybe bare flooring too.
Users of the Glide should only expect to use it to do floors. For anything else, you spray some Pledge on a piece of paper toweling or a cloth, swat a table top with it and call it cleaning. However, that's all the more reason why it -- the "Glide" -- should be priced far more sensibly. There is nothing to this cleaner other than a larger than usual motor has been placed in a stick vac.
I can't believe the public has allowed itself to run so far afield that it can not see what is in front of its face and as clear and obvious as day. But I am probably mistaken since Sears is most likely cutting the price almost 25-percent in the effort just to move the darn thing. The designers who came up with the idea for Sears should have seriously looked at the Shark Navigator, which was already here, and attempted to come up with something better or snazzier.
Best,
Venson
This message was modified Nov 20, 2010 by Venson