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Central Vacuum Cleaners Seattle WA

Central vacuum systems have large, permanently mounted canisters with a motor attached. How central vacuums work and what to consider before installing one? Read on.

AAA 1 Appliance Srv
(206) 328-8898
1 Appliance Srv
Seattle, WA
Advanced Energy Savers Inc
(206) 623-0475
111 S Lander St
Seattle, WA
Abundant Heating and Air
(206) 244-3393
10807 2nd Ave S
Seattle, WA
Accurate Heating & Electrical LLC
(206) 937-0777
11806 4th Ave S
Seattle, WA
Bradlee Distributors, USA, Inc.
(206) 284-8400
1400 Elliott Ave. W.
Seattle, WA
Seattle Appliance Repair Service
800 286-9598
815 1st Ave
Seattle, WA
14th Ave Junk Shop
(206) 957-3828
1404 14th Ave
Seattle, WA
Ajax Electric Company Incorporated
(206) 622-9945
2911 1st Ave S
Seattle, WA
Action Air Systems
(206) 344-5550
4021 S 166th St
Seattle, WA
Wiseman's Appliance
(206) 937-7400
2619 California Ave SW
Bellevue, WA
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Central Vacuum Cleaners

Article

Central Vacuum Cleaners

By Lynn Marie Bower

Many persons find that, for them, the easiest and most efficient home vacuums are central vacuum systems. Central vacuum systems have large, permanently mounted canisters with a motor attached. These are usually placed near or on an exterior wall in a utility room or basement. Most of these units are vented to the outdoors, although some models are designed to vent indoors. Of the two, the exterior-venting types are considered much healthier. With outdoor-venting, the air that’s pulled into the vacuum is sent outdoors (not back into the living space) after it passes through the filter. This eliminates any concerns over particulates getting past the collection container.

No matter which model you purchase, all central vacuums require special tubing to be permanently installed within the walls of the house. Special vacuum hose inlets , which are connected to these tubes, are located strategically in various places on the home’s walls. The tubes and inlets are typically installed while a house is being built, but there are also ways to install them in an existing house.

To operate a central vacuum, you simply plug the hose (usually 20-30' long) into one of the inlets. Plugging in the hose automatically turns on the vacuum motor. A variety of cleaning attachments are available, including an agitating power head. With only the hose to maneuver, many people find these vacuums can be easier to use than portable models.

There are two different strategies currently used by central-vacuum manufacturers. The first uses direct straight line suction through a cloth or paper dust-collection bag. As with portable vacuums using this approach, the more the bag fills up and the walls of the bag’s sides gets coated with particulate matter, the more the vacuum loses suction. With cyclonic technology on the other hand, a whirlwind airstream is formed which causes the heavier particles to precipitate (be thrown out) to the sides of a permanent collection bin and then fall to the bottom of a canister unit while the lighter weight particles continue directly through the unit to the outdoors. Although the vacuum won’t lose suction as the receptacle fills, some dust may fall onto motor bearings. This may damage them in time. So, as a further improvement, a few central vacuum manufacturers have opted for cyclonic action combined with special internal filters to trap the wayward dust. Unfortunately, these filters must be periodically removed and cleaned. Other companies have designed special self-cleaning filters, where the air flow itself continually cleans off the filtering surfaces.

If you’re interested in having a central vacuum, there are a number of lines in the marketplace. One brand to consider is Beam (Beam Industries). Beam has several models with cyclonic technology and self-cleaning filters. None use filtering bags. One model, the Serenity, is de...

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