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14-04-2008, 16:05
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Sheffield
Total Posts: 1,047
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hoover for picking up tonnes of fur
__________________
If life is like a box of chocolates I would have eaten it!
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14-04-2008, 16:07
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#2
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: sheffield
Total Posts: 197
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I've got a Hoover ALYX, this works great because there's a turbo attatchment which sucks up dog hairs like there's no tomorow. I think it cost about £50 from Currys.
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14-04-2008, 16:16
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#3
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pink assassin
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Not far away
Total Posts: 4,976
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i gave up and had the whole house laminated ........ it was either that or immac the dog
__________________
Remember, today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday.
-- Dale Carnegie
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14-04-2008, 21:07
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#4
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Sheffield
Total Posts: 1,047
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pinklady
i gave up and had the whole house laminated ........ it was either that or immac the dog
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Lol now that's an idea... Only joking
__________________
If life is like a box of chocolates I would have eaten it!
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14-04-2008, 21:36
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#5
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Account Closed
Join Date: May 2006
Location: around here
Total Posts: 3,880
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I would say a Dyson, they have brilliant suction.
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15-04-2008, 22:51
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: SF of course!
Total Posts: 32,265
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The Sebo
it's electronic height adjustment makes quick work of the most clingy dog hair, and if you have a long haired breed you'll appreciate the button that releases the roller brush for cleaning
... and can somebody merge this thread with the collection of others on this topic?
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16-04-2008, 01:08
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#7
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Sheffield S11
Total Posts: 5,569
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Still want to try the SEBO someday but for now in terms of suction and loved my MIELE but they dont do an upright (better for my bad back) so it's the DYSON - but they're designed by blokes who never hoovered a floor in their lives and if I'd invented the DYSON I'd have made it more user-friendly. Ive had a DC05 (mini one) and now have a DC18 (slimline upright which is brill except for the stupid extending wand -great fro cleaning up stairs but useless for cleaning cushions unless you have 4 foot long arms or get someone else to hold the cushion for you) and Ive got the mini hand-held Dyson animal - pricey but a fab cordless alternative when you're doing a quick dash-round and still great suction- none of the other myriad of hand helds Ive had even remotely compare with it.
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16-04-2008, 02:14
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#8
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: SF of course!
Total Posts: 32,265
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ah - now - bad backs....
... the Sebo upright was the choice of many bad-back sufferers I served in John Lewis - presumably because it doesn't dig it's bristles into the carpet and propels itself along the carpet
go and ask if you can test drive one in the shop - Peterborough certainly used to allow customers to do this
Meile are known to be the best cylinder cleaners - and if you have an electrobrush, even more so. The Sebo cylinder was a close second though
Sebo now do a kind of hybrid cleaner I'd like to have a closer look at
www.sebo.co.uk
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16-04-2008, 07:02
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Total Posts: 3,781
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You need one with a rotating brush bar really for picking up fur,we got a Vax 1850w with turbo brush for stairs,on the whole it's a very good machine cost about £70 from Comet.
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16-04-2008, 08:08
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#10
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2008
Total Posts: 743
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The only vacuum I have had thats lasted longer than 6 months at a time is a dyson, as long as you keep it clean and do the filters they seem to go on and on and have great suction. Dont even think of any normal type vac unless you have money to burn. I also have mostly wood and tiles now, just a carpet in living room and on the stairs, its so much easier and NO SMELL, cos lets be honest our little dears can make carpets stink!
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16-04-2008, 08:54
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#11
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: woodseats
Total Posts: 5,580
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I have had a dyson animal for 6 years, its ace and i wouldn't be without it! I have alot of small furries in my house, 2 dogs , 2 cats, 2 rabbits, and visiting animals. It does a great job. I have an old kirby upstairs thats good but i prefer the dyson as its lighter! and easier to get into clean it up afterwards. I am going to replace my dyson soon with the newer version as its a must for me.
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16-04-2008, 09:00
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#12
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Technobabbler
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Crossing the Einstein-Rosenberg bridge
Total Posts: 1,551
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We got an Electrolux which was absolutely rubbish, the intake into the drum is next to the filter and Mollys hair just clogs it up after a couple of minutes.
You should have seen the mess I made trying to clean up a cat litter spill (whole tray - molly strikes again!) it filled the whole room with cat litter dust in under a minute! I went down the pub and waited till my other half came home.
So moral of the story - dont buy electrolux.
__________________
You know, a lot of girls go out with me just to further their careers...damn anthropologists.
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16-04-2008, 09:08
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#13
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: woodseats
Total Posts: 5,580
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I have to say the dyson sucks up cat litter too !!! very well I do use bleach in it after to clean the collection box out after or usually try to leave it for Dave to do
Last edited by teeny; 16-04-2008 at 09:10.
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16-04-2008, 09:23
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#14
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Technobabbler
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Crossing the Einstein-Rosenberg bridge
Total Posts: 1,551
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Our Dyson died, they are just too expensive to replace ~£150 seems to be the cheapest. the DC07 is £200 at TJ Hughes.
__________________
You know, a lot of girls go out with me just to further their careers...damn anthropologists.
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16-04-2008, 09:25
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#15
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Millhouses
Total Posts: 783
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My vote is for the Dyson range too, but ignore the 'never loses suction' advertising - they do, albeit much more slowly than a conventional cleaner.
The good news is that they can easily be stripped down and cleaned. I do mine once, maybe twice a year.
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16-04-2008, 09:34
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#16
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: SF of course!
Total Posts: 32,265
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the Sebo has an industrial guarantee  five year parts, one year labour for domestic use, but I think mine must be maybe 12 years old now
anything that needs replacing on it can usually be sent out in the post - as it all comes apart so easily - mostly with the push of a button
it has s-class filtration, doesn't lose suction, and you can choose to have a charcoal filter if you have anything particularly niffy you're cleaning up after - such as a bloodhound
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16-04-2008, 10:20
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#17
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Sheffield S11
Total Posts: 5,569
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my lovely miele lasted 15-18 years ( I forget exactly). Will def investigate the SEBO when I'm ready to spend yet more dosh on a hoover- I go through them like crazy and fall out with the ones I own, even the dysons
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16-04-2008, 13:08
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#18
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WYSIWYG
Moderator
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: north east derbyshire
Total Posts: 16,605
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IN no particular order
Vorwerk - the dogs.
Lindhaus - currently 4 years old - sucks the hairs off the digs.
Kirby
all 3 are dual motors btw.
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16-04-2008, 13:19
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#19
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: SF of course!
Total Posts: 32,265
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I've heard good reports on the Vorwerk too - though I've never seen one
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16-04-2008, 13:22
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#20
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WYSIWYG
Moderator
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: north east derbyshire
Total Posts: 16,605
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I had a home demo 10 years ago via a dog groomer - the machine was superb but @ £500 a little too expensive to replace. I bought the Lindhaus from Killi's it's heavier but excellent especially when we had 5 dogs.
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