Commercial Vacuums -
Information
A Commercial Vacuum
is a very important tool for the maintenance
of the interior of a commercial facility.
- The commercial vacuum should clean as
efficiently as possible
- Efficient cleaning is largely the result of
better design - not necessarily a bigger motor(s)
- The commercial vacuum should clean as
fast as possible
- Improved performance is a result of better
engineering
- Balance & the "feel" of the vacuum contributes
to easy usage
- Increased cleaning efficiencies through better
design enable faster cleaning
- The commercial vacuum should
filter effectively
- A good filter provides micron or HEPA filtration
- Without a proper filtering mechanism the tiny
pollutants being removed in large quantities from the facility are being
exhausted back into the environment where they will be breathed into the deep
lung passageways
The
commercial vacuum should clean as fast as possible
- A good filter alone is not the key to proper
filtration
- A sealed system must by in place to
ensure that no particle leakage occurs along the dirt passageways
- Most vacuums - even those with adequate filters
- leak prodigious quantities of pollutants from the dirt passageways and motor
areas
- The commercial vacuum should
last as long as possible
- The longer a vacuum lasts the better the ROI
- Generally speaking, the cheaper vacuums do not
last as long as the better vacuums
- It costs more to continually buy cheaper
vacuums than to purchase good equipment that lasts considerably longer
- If a $400 vacuum lasts five years it is more
cost effective to buy it than $150 vacuums that last nine months
- The commercial vacuum should require as
little maintenance as possible
- While all vacuums require periodic maintenance
of some sort - e.g., clean revolving brushes, change belts, empty bags, etc. -
the need is to avoid premature breakage
- Better vacuums are simply better constructed
- Better vacuums are better engineered to resist
breakage
Types of Commercial
Vacuums:
- Upright Vacuums
- Single motor uprights
- Single fan "dirty air" uprights
- Twin fan "dirty air" uprights
- Single fan "clean air" bypass uprights
- Twin fan "clean air" bypass uprights
- Filtration from very poor to HEPA
- Twin motor uprights
- One motor - usually twin fan - provides suction
& airflow
- One motor spins the revolving brush
- Good "division of labor" - each motor does its
appointed task
- Filtration usually from micron size to HEPA
- Large area vacs
- Usually up to 28 inch
- Usually very poor to average filtration
- Uprights are usually limited to carpeted areas
- Canister Vacuums
- Dry only
- 1 gal US to 55 gal US with drumhead
- Wet/dry
- 1 gal US to about 20 gal US
- Plastic "unbreakable" construction
- Cold-rolled-steel construction
- Stainless steel construction
- Filtration from very poor to HEPA
- Cleaning apertures from 1.25 inch to 3 inch
- Increased flexibility with most canister vacuums
vs. uprights
- Longer hoses & wands
- A broad spectrum of cleaning accessories
available
- Generally speaking, an increased efficiency vs.
uprights
- Larger, more powerful vacuum motor
- Backpack
Vacuums
- Shoulder type
- Hip type
- Cleaning accessories from 1.25 inch to 1.5 inch
- Electric power nozzles available
- Filtration from micron to HEPA
- Fast, flexible cleaning abilities
- Canister-type abilities but without the
"pull-around" of a canister
- Pile Groomers
- Heavy, massively-built upright type vacuums
expressly for thorough grooming & agitation of commercial-grade carpeting
- Not designed for easy, continuous vacuuming
- Specialty usage
- Groom a carpet to open the fibers before carpet
extraction cleaning, etc.