gahrajmahal
Well-known member
This thread has been edited due to all of the original photos being lost from Photo Bucket. Some of the comments are out of sequence, but the photos are now on the GJ server.
Hey all, I never was a fan of the typical round shop vac due to the unwieldy hose and wand that comes crashing down any time you are working around around it. We actually had a central vac installed in our house over 15 years ago and it is one of my most favorite purchases. The fine dust from vacuuming gets deposited outside, and the noisy vacuum is in the garage.
But everyone still needs a good shop vac for cleaning out the car and for those messy tasks you wouldn't dream of using a central vac for, like house remodeling and the dreaded drywall dust!
Our trusty round shop vac that came from my dad, was passed along to my son during his kitchen remodel. Now he can put up with that wand crashing to the floor when you walk by it!
It was during his remodel I bought this Rigid Tool box style vacuum. Hose
and cord are contained in a compartment, wand extensions clipped to the side. I often take my tools on-the-road when I am working on projects, and this vacuum is easy to transport and has great suction!




It was several years ago now, and the vacuum bags are often not available in the stores so I just buy them online.
The one dislike I have had with the Rigid vac is the hose. In order to be able to store it it has to compress to a short length. Great for storage, but when vacuuming the suction causes it to shorten up actually pulling quite strongly out of your hand and back to the unit. Really a pain say when vacuuming out the car. Also, like any shop vac, the performance really suffers when vacuuming up drywall dust, or being able to connect it to the vacuum port on a sander.
So I started researching how I could upgrade the hose and came up with one from Rockler.

The new hose worked great when attached to my sander and also when working on an extended project. No more pulling hose!
But now I am back to the old problem of where to store the long hose? I have a two car attached garage for my work space (the Gahrajmahal) and keep two cars in there at all times, one being the 17 foot long barge in my avitar, so space is at a premium.
I was using the new setup with the sander on a drywall job and the larger bits tore the bag inside causing a massive plume of drywall dust into the room. That is when I decided I needed to try a cyclone separator to keep most of the dirt out of the bag. I did not want to have another round can and was hoping to get storage for that new 12 ft. hose. So, I took the hose into the big box stores with the idea of buying a tool box to convert to the cyclone container. Not wanting to spend too much money in case it did not work, I purchased a Chinese cyclone from Google http://www.banggood.com/High-Efficiency-Cyclone-Powder-Dust-Collector-Filter-Top-Quality-For-Vacuums-IA1-p-1028998.html?currency=USD&createTmp=1&utm_source=ebay&utm_medium=cpc&utm_content=cathy&utm_campaign=hg3-US&ebay
The box I ended up with was another Rigid item


Hey all, I never was a fan of the typical round shop vac due to the unwieldy hose and wand that comes crashing down any time you are working around around it. We actually had a central vac installed in our house over 15 years ago and it is one of my most favorite purchases. The fine dust from vacuuming gets deposited outside, and the noisy vacuum is in the garage.
But everyone still needs a good shop vac for cleaning out the car and for those messy tasks you wouldn't dream of using a central vac for, like house remodeling and the dreaded drywall dust!
Our trusty round shop vac that came from my dad, was passed along to my son during his kitchen remodel. Now he can put up with that wand crashing to the floor when you walk by it!
It was during his remodel I bought this Rigid Tool box style vacuum. Hose
and cord are contained in a compartment, wand extensions clipped to the side. I often take my tools on-the-road when I am working on projects, and this vacuum is easy to transport and has great suction!




It was several years ago now, and the vacuum bags are often not available in the stores so I just buy them online.
The one dislike I have had with the Rigid vac is the hose. In order to be able to store it it has to compress to a short length. Great for storage, but when vacuuming the suction causes it to shorten up actually pulling quite strongly out of your hand and back to the unit. Really a pain say when vacuuming out the car. Also, like any shop vac, the performance really suffers when vacuuming up drywall dust, or being able to connect it to the vacuum port on a sander.
So I started researching how I could upgrade the hose and came up with one from Rockler.

The new hose worked great when attached to my sander and also when working on an extended project. No more pulling hose!
But now I am back to the old problem of where to store the long hose? I have a two car attached garage for my work space (the Gahrajmahal) and keep two cars in there at all times, one being the 17 foot long barge in my avitar, so space is at a premium.
I was using the new setup with the sander on a drywall job and the larger bits tore the bag inside causing a massive plume of drywall dust into the room. That is when I decided I needed to try a cyclone separator to keep most of the dirt out of the bag. I did not want to have another round can and was hoping to get storage for that new 12 ft. hose. So, I took the hose into the big box stores with the idea of buying a tool box to convert to the cyclone container. Not wanting to spend too much money in case it did not work, I purchased a Chinese cyclone from Google http://www.banggood.com/High-Efficiency-Cyclone-Powder-Dust-Collector-Filter-Top-Quality-For-Vacuums-IA1-p-1028998.html?currency=USD&createTmp=1&utm_source=ebay&utm_medium=cpc&utm_content=cathy&utm_campaign=hg3-US&ebay
The box I ended up with was another Rigid item


Last edited:




















