Anonymous wrote:Hoover elite. It has the best suction and baby that's what matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With a cannister vacuum do you have to carry the cannister part in one hand and the vacuum part in the other hand? Or do you leave the cannister in one place and then move it a bit? I have never had one so don't think I totally understand the concept.
The canister has casters on it and wheels behind you. Canister vacuums are better for hard floors although can do just fine on carpet as well - I just wouldn't buy one for a house that was more than 50% carpet.
Because the canister trails behind you, you need to keep moving forward, not backing up or you'll trip over it - it pulls forward but the hose is soft so it doesn't push it backward. The nice thing is the actual body part you are pushing is much lighter than an upright, and it can get in to a lot tighter/lower spaces.
I was really unsure about my decision the first several times I used it, but now that I'm used to it, I really like the canister because of ease of using the wand/extensions (which is something I always want to do but when I had an upright it always seemed like a hassle, even with the easy pull-out one on Dyson).
NP here - canister has wheels, I'm not sure I understand the moving forward vs backwards thing that PP is talking about, but maybe I did things differently when I had an upright. I love, love the reach that my canister vacuum provides and I have one of the cheaper Mieles that has a shorter cord/hose. I also love that the turbo brush turns on/off and makes it easier to switch between floors/rugs/carpets. And holy crap, my Miele is SO quiet compared to Bissell. I can vacuum the living room while my toddler is sleeping upstairs.
I'm from Germany, the land of Miele, and I had never seen an upright vacuum until I moved to America. I really don't understand why anyone wants them, but there must be a reason (maybe carpets? but we have carpets in Germany, too, although wall-to-wall carpeting tends to be shaggier here). I find it very cumbersome to push an upright around, it's hard (or impossible) to get under furniture, and yes, the ones I've used are LOUD. Louder than any vacuum I had ever handled in Germany, even cheaper canisters. I now have a Miele Olympus (the cheapest Miele, I think), and it is great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With a cannister vacuum do you have to carry the cannister part in one hand and the vacuum part in the other hand? Or do you leave the cannister in one place and then move it a bit? I have never had one so don't think I totally understand the concept.
The canister has casters on it and wheels behind you. Canister vacuums are better for hard floors although can do just fine on carpet as well - I just wouldn't buy one for a house that was more than 50% carpet.
Because the canister trails behind you, you need to keep moving forward, not backing up or you'll trip over it - it pulls forward but the hose is soft so it doesn't push it backward. The nice thing is the actual body part you are pushing is much lighter than an upright, and it can get in to a lot tighter/lower spaces.
I was really unsure about my decision the first several times I used it, but now that I'm used to it, I really like the canister because of ease of using the wand/extensions (which is something I always want to do but when I had an upright it always seemed like a hassle, even with the easy pull-out one on Dyson).
NP here - canister has wheels, I'm not sure I understand the moving forward vs backwards thing that PP is talking about, but maybe I did things differently when I had an upright. I love, love the reach that my canister vacuum provides and I have one of the cheaper Mieles that has a shorter cord/hose. I also love that the turbo brush turns on/off and makes it easier to switch between floors/rugs/carpets. And holy crap, my Miele is SO quiet compared to Bissell. I can vacuum the living room while my toddler is sleeping upstairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With a cannister vacuum do you have to carry the cannister part in one hand and the vacuum part in the other hand? Or do you leave the cannister in one place and then move it a bit? I have never had one so don't think I totally understand the concept.
The canister has casters on it and wheels behind you. Canister vacuums are better for hard floors although can do just fine on carpet as well - I just wouldn't buy one for a house that was more than 50% carpet.
Because the canister trails behind you, you need to keep moving forward, not backing up or you'll trip over it - it pulls forward but the hose is soft so it doesn't push it backward. The nice thing is the actual body part you are pushing is much lighter than an upright, and it can get in to a lot tighter/lower spaces.
I was really unsure about my decision the first several times I used it, but now that I'm used to it, I really like the canister because of ease of using the wand/extensions (which is something I always want to do but when I had an upright it always seemed like a hassle, even with the easy pull-out one on Dyson).
Anonymous wrote:With a cannister vacuum do you have to carry the cannister part in one hand and the vacuum part in the other hand? Or do you leave the cannister in one place and then move it a bit? I have never had one so don't think I totally understand the concept.
Anonymous wrote:Miele Olympus.