Both the roller turbo and the straight suction brush tool are extremely convenient on hard floors as supplements for clean air upright vacuum when vacuuming hard floors under kitchen and dining room tables and you don’t necessarily need to move every chair but want to clean to the corners and around all of the legs. I use a straight suction tool and it’s been very helpful to me at this time with my back condition.
I do actually use this attachment with my central vacuum units, I think it works well. It kind of sounds like a sports car or motor cycle, it's a clever design, when I connect it to one of my 240 volt central vacuum units, it literally sounds like a reved up race car.
I'm glad you mentioned it's not well suited for high-suction vacuums like Sebo and Henry (which I both own). I was about to go out and buy one. Are there any fluffy rotating floor tools (that are kind of like the Dyson fluffy floor roller attachment) that are coming out soon or are out now that can be attached to vacuums like Sebo or Henry?
Hi, thanks for the review. I wish you had shown an actual pickup test when operated with a powerful vac. I have a proteam super coach 6 and vacmaster shop vac, both are quite powerful. I was almost going to buy two of this attachment, one for my interior hardwood and tile floors, and another for my garage concrete floors until I saw this review. Does the very fast spinning move dirt too fast for the suction to pick it up? Is that why you say it becomes less effective? I guess I’m trying to understand why spinning too fast reduces performance and in what way. Also, is scratching the hardwood floor a serious concern with a rotating brush like that (especially with a powerful vac)?
Yes any spinning brush when it gets up until they hire RPM range generally will scratch floor. This is intended for a machine with a low amount of power to spin the brush slowly. On a higher power machine you don't need a spinning brush straight suction brush will work better. On your lower powered vacmaster you might give that a try
Thank you! How about concrete floors (including stamped), like in a garage or unfinished basement, where scratching is not a concern and there may be some rugs here and there that would benefit from a spinning brush? Would you say this attachment with a high power vacuum do well in such application, or would the WesselWerk RD285 Designation (no spinning brush) perform better?
Where can I buy one of these online or is the part number for it
There's a link in the description.
Both the roller turbo and the straight suction brush tool are extremely convenient on hard floors as supplements for clean air upright vacuum when vacuuming hard floors under kitchen and dining room tables and you don’t necessarily need to move every chair but want to clean to the corners and around all of the legs. I use a straight suction tool and it’s been very helpful to me at this time with my back condition.
Oh wow an interesting vacuum cleaner attachment! Maybe not the greatest attachment, yet it does a decent job.
VERY useful review. Thank you!
I do actually use this attachment with my central vacuum units, I think it works well. It kind of sounds like a sports car or motor cycle, it's a clever design, when I connect it to one of my 240 volt central vacuum units, it literally sounds like a reved up race car.
I'm glad you mentioned it's not well suited for high-suction vacuums like Sebo and Henry (which I both own). I was about to go out and buy one. Are there any fluffy rotating floor tools (that are kind of like the Dyson fluffy floor roller attachment) that are coming out soon or are out now that can be attached to vacuums like Sebo or Henry?
Generally you don't need them with that kind of machine. The purpose of this attachment is to aid lower powered vacuums.
I use this on my VERY delicate carpets/rugs
Would you choose this over the rd285?
Funny, was wondering about cat litter and you answered my question!
I was wondering if you have seen the new Wessel Werk Speed Glider? Looks pretty cool.
Wow, this would work great on a variable speed Miele on low speed.
I bought one of those and I put it on my Hoover corded vacuum and it spun so aggressively the bearing started shaking
Very cool
Hi, thanks for the review. I wish you had shown an actual pickup test when operated with a powerful vac. I have a proteam super coach 6 and vacmaster shop vac, both are quite powerful. I was almost going to buy two of this attachment, one for my interior hardwood and tile floors, and another for my garage concrete floors until I saw this review. Does the very fast spinning move dirt too fast for the suction to pick it up? Is that why you say it becomes less effective? I guess I’m trying to understand why spinning too fast reduces performance and in what way. Also, is scratching the hardwood floor a serious concern with a rotating brush like that (especially with a powerful vac)?
Yes any spinning brush when it gets up until they hire RPM range generally will scratch floor. This is intended for a machine with a low amount of power to spin the brush slowly. On a higher power machine you don't need a spinning brush straight suction brush will work better. On your lower powered vacmaster you might give that a try
Thank you! How about concrete floors (including stamped), like in a garage or unfinished basement, where scratching is not a concern and there may be some rugs here and there that would benefit from a spinning brush? Would you say this attachment with a high power vacuum do well in such application, or would the WesselWerk RD285 Designation (no spinning brush) perform better?
I bought the HFT 265 + attachment for my 13 y/o Miele for $25 total. I call that a win, no?
Make sure you use it on the " ear" setting (3/4 power) if you have the adapter restricting it.
Do you think this would be appropriate for a Miele C3 890w EU version?
Not sure I haven't used a cucked Miele.
Slightly unrelated, but Dyson’s soft roller seems terrible unhygienic lol. At least this head looks fairly simple to clean
I believe Dyson fluffy rollers are washable.
@@Dirty_Bear22 They are, I washed mine recently.
Wessel-Werk's one trick pony