To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Best Shop Vac model ever made?

To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

AEAdam

Well-known member
Joined
May 27, 2023
Messages
2,746
Location
SE PA
Fein.

Not the most amazing suction, but the only vac I’ve ever used that can effectively handle dry wall dust without exhausting it all over the shop/house/kitchen. I look for two things in a shop vac, low noise and low emissions.

I don’t need or want to vacuum up rocks or 3/8” bolts. So dumb. More suction isn’t better. If anything, I want to vacuum up the dust and leave the bolts, tape measures and bowling balls.
 

four.cycle

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2015
Messages
28,788
Location
Tacoma, Washington
^ One of the advantages of having 36 feet of hose is that I can put the canister outdoors, run the hose through a door or window, and not have to be concerned about the recirculating dust. I put the standard "deflector" thingie over the exhaust port, and over that a couple legs from an old pair of ***** hose - that stops the most of the stuff right there.
When you have that much hose hooked up. LOTS of suction is requisite.

The reason I wanted a vacuum cleaner that would pick up a 3/8" x 6-inch bolt and could be rolled down two flights of stairs is because the crew at that store location had managed to destroy no fewer than five vacuum cleaners over the course of a couple years. I guess they figured if the vacuum cleaner was broken, they wouldn't have to vacuum. I had to take the necessary steps to cause them to change their ways.

The kid that I sent upstairs to vacuum up all the dust bunnies behind the Fel-Pro gaskets DID make several attempts to kill that Mastercraft, but failed.
He DID, however, manage to cook the 350 V8 in one of our delivery trucks to the point where the rocker arms turned blue, and a couple years later burned down his parents house on Christmas morning (by stuffing ALL of the wrapping paper into a fireplace and tossing a match to it.)(I still have the news clipping around here somewhere in an old sketchbook.)

YMMV
 

billconner

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 20, 2021
Messages
6,964
Location
Thousand Islands NYS
Mileaukee model 8935. 1983 purchase. Bought all the accessories and a case - 144 iirc - of bags for it. About a dozen left. Lots of plaster demo. Sucked dirt out of post holes. A hot water heater failure and a stopped sink. Just won't die.
 

Attachments

  • PXL_20231208_163117000_copy_768x1024.jpg
    PXL_20231208_163117000_copy_768x1024.jpg
    272.7 KB · Views: 57

66HertzClone

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 6, 2006
Messages
4,037
Location
Long Valley, NJ
In the quick lube industry the Wap and Nilfisk Alto are the kings, extremely durable, rebuildable, and very quiet. I have a Wap in my garage that was used in a hop that we closed. This thing is bullet proof, the only annoying things is the wheels which seems to be true of nearly every vacuum out there. I used the DBA meter in an app on my phone and it registered 71 dbs when held about 3 feet away from it when running.

A couple of years ago someone here posted picture of how they solved the crappy wheel problem on their vacuum, I saved it and I will get around o making this change. 60132203770__02D70727-2897-43AB-9F96-13719DE1A4D7 (1).JPG1997_industrie_229.jpg
 

GCS

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 12, 2014
Messages
313
Location
Oklahoma
No mention of Stihl’s wet/dry vac.
Particularly their commercial model SE 122

Any info or recommendations
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1269.png
    IMG_1269.png
    22.8 KB · Views: 21

Nutria

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 23, 2015
Messages
798
Location
Eastern Sierra
Fein.

Not the most amazing suction, but the only vac I’ve ever used that can effectively handle dry wall dust without exhausting it all over the shop/house/kitchen. I look for two things in a shop vac, low noise and low emissions.
I've been happy with mine. It's one of the oldest ones that I've seen; purchased it used. Reasonable power, reasonably quiet, bag plus HEPA canister, auto-on feature is handy, as is the accessory outlet, just keeps going.

IMG_2845.JPG
IMG_2846.JPG
 

neophyte

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 23, 2012
Messages
9,628
Location
Pennsylvannia
I've been happy with mine. It's one of the oldest ones that I've seen; purchased it used. Reasonable power, reasonably quiet, bag plus HEPA canister, auto-on feature is handy, as is the accessory outlet, just keeps going.

IMG_2845.JPG
IMG_2846.JPG
That’s likely a WAP rebrand.
I think I read that the later series that came after these was also made for Fein by WAP, or Nilfisk.
I’m not sure whether the current Fein vacs are still made by WAP/Nilfisk.
 

mikegt4

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 12, 2005
Messages
3,268
Location
sw ohio
I got this Craftsman from a friend back in the 1970's, 2 motors and a filter for each. The lights dim when I use it.

The hoses are nice flexible rubber, not the stiff plastic ones of today.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20231207_141239291.jpg
    IMG_20231207_141239291.jpg
    491.8 KB · Views: 45

RAS61

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 14, 2012
Messages
538
Location
Low Country, SC
I have a Craftsman from the early 90's, that's still working as good as the day I got it. I chose the 8 gallon size to save space and it's been a great combination of size and power. Great suction, used it to clean up the flooded basement several times before I installed a sump pump. Don't know if they still make em the same, but one of the best tool values over the long haul for me
 
Last edited:

Jtels85

Well-known member
Joined
May 3, 2017
Messages
1,515
Location
Ohio
My Dad has a Sears Craftsman 12 Gal he bought in 1984. It’s missing all of the casters and has seen some abuse and it still works amazing! That is the best shop vac ever made.
 

IndyGarage

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 29, 2010
Messages
9,683
Location
Indy
I still have one old Jet engine sounding craftsman - which works find but I hate the noise - it won't die.

At the shop I have about a 12 year old stainless Shop Vac brand with a quiet motor and a 12 gallon tank. I really like it.

I have a Nilfisk that I use for indoor sanding and other woodworking tools. It has good suction and is very quiet, but it has the smaller diameter hose, which is not as useful for general cleaning.

I have a Milwaukee V28 cordless toolbox vac - very similar to the current 18v vac - it's noisy but convenient for cleaning up after small jobs around the house or in the boat.

In my storage unit I have an 8 gallon shop vac stainless. I thought it would be as good as the one above - it's not nearly as good.

And in the home garage I have a Vacumaid - hanging on the wall for cleaning cars - it is horribly noisy - but has really good suction and is very convenient.


If I could only have one of those it would probably be the Shop Vac quiet Stainless model.
 

66HertzClone

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 6, 2006
Messages
4,037
Location
Long Valley, NJ
That’s likely a WAP rebrand.
I think I read that the later series that came after these was also made for Fein by WAP, or Nilfisk.
I’m not sure whether the current Fein vacs are still made by WAP/Nilfisk.
That is definitely a Wap vacuum, had those in my shop when we opened back in 1990. I used some PVC tubing and made a post to hand the hose from to keep it off the wet floor on rainy day, nothing like a wet dirty hose dragged across the seats of a customers car. The one I have now is the nest generation of that unit.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

rickpaulos

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 4, 2019
Messages
85
Location
Iowa
Funny this topic came up.

Being gift giving season, Mrs. Imagineer asked if I needed anything for the workshop, like a new shop-vac. She's witnessed me ranting over, or kicking around my circa 1995 Craftsman unit. Mine looks like this model... 1701889793500.png

It's small, loud, top heavy and the wheels can't roll over even the tiniest item. I'm on the 3rd or 4th power cord and have replaced all the hose accessories . . . but the darn thing still works fine.

I have one very similar to this. one day I decided to flush out the original plastic hose with a garden hose stuck in one end. Well it was like a sprinkler hose, water was shooting out in all directions from dozens of pin holes. I found a better replacement hose. longer and it didn't have a narrow restriction where the end attaches to the vac.
 

rickpaulos

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 4, 2019
Messages
85
Location
Iowa
Not the best ever.

I bought this HEPA shop vac to use with a drywall sander. Drywall dust is very fine. I've never seen a shop vac that doesn't allow some dust through. Usually the finest stuff gets exhausted and lands everywhere, including in the air we are breathing at the time. I still wore a face filter but those are limited in their abilities too. We had taped off the kitchen furnace vents to prevent the dust from getting into the rest of the house.

Masterforce brand sold at Menards. HEPA. 4 layers of filtration. I added a shop vac bag to make that 5 layers and to make it easier to clean out. No idea who makes it.

the good:
Best filtration around.
Good wheels.
long cord.

okay, that's it.

Now some of the issues.

odd bunch of hose attachments with different size fittings. Like a grab bag of mismatched accessories. My wife was wanting to like this HEPA vac but she got frustrated trying work out the fittings. None have a decent swivel built in so the end of the hose fitting keeps unscrewing as I move about.

No decent cord storage and it's a very long cord.

Much too easy to accidentally turn on the wheel parking brakes.

After using it attached to a dry wall sander for the kitchen project, the canister filter was very clogged up. The extra bag and the 'over the canister' pre filter bag didn't do much to stop that extra fine drywall dust. I decided to wash the main canister filter. The canister filter is not a "washable" type. I put it back in the vac and the vac could not **** the water out of the filter. The soaked in water completely blocked the air flow. I left the filter outdoors for a full week to dry then it worked again. We're in a drought so the air is very dry here. A new canister filter is $80 at Menards. And that is a bargain compared to the compatible VacMaster filter at over $120. I did pull the exit filters for inspection and they looked pretty clean so the main filter is doing the job when it's not wet.

Oh, yeah, they claim this is a wet/dry vac. No way you should ever let it get wet.

masterforce.hepa.shop.vac.jpg
 
Last edited:

Reata210

Active member
Joined
Dec 8, 2020
Messages
42
Location
Home
I got this around 92. Bought the version of this model in 08 for the attached garage and it is not near the quality. The older one has way more suction.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_6373.jpeg
    IMG_6373.jpeg
    876.3 KB · Views: 49

Zeus36

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 1, 2016
Messages
814
Location
Ventura, California
My Dad has a Sears Craftsman 12 Gal he bought in 1984. It’s missing all of the casters and has seen some abuse and it still works amazing! That is the best shop vac ever made.
Same for the Craftsman 12 gallon vac. Was taking my old shop vac to a drop off site back in 1987 and someone was dropping their late dad's 12 gal Sears Craftsman with all the accessories. I grabbed that and it has worked like new ever since. Just replaced the brushes in 2023. Used for draining a waterbed over three house moves, emptying several toilets, floods, overloaded washing machine and getting the final water out of our spa. For dry stuff, got the paper bag liners for sanding drywall when we bought the house in 2009. Used it during a full interior remodel and restored hardwood floors. These days it is mostly connected to my table saw.
Bought two Rigid vacs from HD 13 years ago for $29 each. One is still NIB, the other sits under my workbench with a foot switch.

1702338506479.png
 
OP
R

rdoaner

Member
Joined
Mar 16, 2020
Messages
19
Location
Pittsburgh
My Dad has a Sears Craftsman 12 Gal he bought in 1984. It’s missing all of the casters and has seen some abuse and it still works amazing! That is the best shop vac ever made.
Does yours look like the one Zeus36 has? Honestly never seen that model before
 

johnre

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2016
Messages
1,049
Location
Portland, OR
After going through two plastic shop vacs, I wised up and got a VacuMaid garage vacuum. It hangs on the wall and is therefore not portable, but I ordered it with a 50' hose, and it's much easier to drag just this hose around than it is the entire vacuum on an extension cord. It's made in USA, very high quality, and picks up anything that a shop vac will pick up - but it uses paper bag filters, so you do have to watch out for sharp objects.
1702714394075.png

And no, I don't use it for sawdust; that's a job for my shop dust collector.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Dec 11, 2023
Messages
11
A little late to the party here, but wanted to weigh in on a couple vacs also.

I have several shop vacs (as do many of us). One is the old Craftsman almost identical to the one pictured above. No idea how old it is, but probably 80's vintage. Inherited it from my Dad who was a lifelong Craftsman buff. He couldn't kill it, and I haven't managed to either.

Bought a 10 gal Shop Vac QSP (plastic) back in the early 90's to deal with a flooded basement. Works surprisingly well (still), and I haven't been nice to that thing at all! It has vacuumed up every nasty, vile, jagged, rocky, muddy mess imaginable and keeps on going. Definitely got my money's worth out of that thing.

Picked up a RIGID 12 gal. vac here recently for use in my woodshop and have been pleasantly impressed with it. It runs kind of triple duty with my radial arm saw, thickness planer and jointer. But the most impressive vacuum I've run across in the past 25 odd years is one I would've never expected, and one I wound up with quite by accident (for FREE no less!).

About 15 years ago my wife got on a vacuum bent, and decided to buy an Oreck house vacuum. I think it was an XL model (or something), and it came with a "Free Gift". The free gift was a compact canister vacuum. It sat in the closet for several years due to no bags. Finally found some bags a while back and decided to give this what I thought was a 'gimmick' vacuum a try. Holy COW! That little thing will damn near **** the chrome off a trailer hitch! It's got some serious pickup power, no kidding either. It's not a wet/dry vac, but it'll pick up about everything else under the sun. I can stick the hose to my hand and pick the whole vacuum up off the floor. It's great for cleaning up drywall dust and other debris. Just got done doing a tile demo job and it had no issues picking up pieces of broken tile, drywall chunks, mastic, etc. It only weighs about 5 lbs, but it's got like a 30' cord on it and a slinky like hose which stretches out to 6-7 feet. It's super handy for cleaning up those little DIY messes (which can often take as much time as the job itself).

Anyway, just thought I'd share another Shop Vac Saga with y'all.
 

CGarage

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 23, 2018
Messages
2,997
Location
United States/Switzerland
I have a black Oreck canister vac with shoulder strap.

Best part was the vanilla scented tabs that they used to make that actually smelled good. The hose was garbage. If you looked at it wrong, it would develop splits and cracks. Easily fixed by spending $20 on a rubber hose made for it off of EBay.

Have since bought a Miele canister vac from Germany and it is forever the best house vacuum. Surpassing the Oreck.
 

Packard V8

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 16, 2009
Messages
7,380
Location
Spokane, WA
So far, I'm really pleased with the 1960s Black & Decker Industrial unit I bought used more than fifty years ago. It's all steel, heavier than the hubs-of-hell, still using the original hose and power cord.

jack vines
 
  • Like
Reactions: All

billford

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 26, 2016
Messages
81
May not be the best, but I have the stainless steel wet/dry rigid with the optional long 2 1/2 inch hose. I have not used it for wet applications yet. I use the internal bag so its easy to clean out.

That thing ***** (in a good way)
 

Beemer

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 21, 2020
Messages
1,402
Location
Northeast
Maybe not the best but I love my Milwaukee twin battery vac. Great for the same reason cordless tools are more convenient than corded. Just flip a switch. No cords to unwind, plug in, then wrap back up.
How noisy is it?
 

Beemer

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 21, 2020
Messages
1,402
Location
Northeast
Idk if there is a best, just matters what you're doing. I've got a nice stainless shop vac brand I've had for years now, works great for the big jobs and house demo etc. But last week I got the m18 Milwaukee vac as I wanted something handy I could leave by the drill press and lathe to vac them off quick. I tell you what, I've used that sucker more the past week than I'd ever imagined for all kinds of stuff,almost wishing I'd of spent the extra 75 bucks and got the fuel version now.
What's your opinion of the noise level of the Milwaukee?
 

Farmall450

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 23, 2011
Messages
13,358
Location
Marengo, Illinois
When they transferred me from Yelm to the 38th Street store, I told them there were two conditions: (1) We had to have hot water in the building so I could get it cleaned up. (Cost us damn near $5K after the entire main box had to be replaced.) and (2) we had to have a decent vacuum cleaner. (This was an old wood-framed structure that had been added onto a dozen times over its 80+ year lifespan.)
This was about... 1982... I went down to "Big Vac" and told the salesman I wanted a vacuum cleaner that would pick up a 3/8" x 6-inch bolt and could be rolled down two flights of stairs and still work. He sold me $442.00 worth of a "commercial" all-steel vacuum cleaner that performed exactly as I expected and wanted.
Sent a new hire upstairs with it and he spent two weeks up there vacuuming up 40-year-old dust bunnies. We ran the hell out of that thing.

Other than having been made of metal, and doubtless being constructed much sturdier than these plastic units we're buying at the big box stores, my "Ridgid" does pretty much everything that high-priced model did, and I can vacuum WET with it. (The commercial one wasn't suitable for "wet".)

Just my two cents.
An expensive Hoover! Could buy a Plastic Festool for that kind of money today :D

1703733145108.png
 

Earp69

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 20, 2016
Messages
859
What's your opinion of the noise level of the Milwaukee?
The fuel version has two power modes, low and high. Low still has good suction but is pretty quite. High has great suction and isn't obnoxiously loud but is still loud. Still quiter than my shop vac
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom