bushmechanic
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- Joined
- Mar 17, 2014
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Edited to include a picture attachment
It's been a while since the great wall mounted vacuum threads that first notified me of this forum some time ago. It's probably about time various products are considered again. Regardless, I bought one recently.
I picked up a Vacuumaid Garage Vac. I bought it in blue, which is a very nice candy powder finish. Not everyone can pull off candy powder properly, but whoever is coating these things sure got it right.
It's made in the USA, and from the looks of things, quite a bit of it is done by hand. They've been very logical about things, actually, using the simplest solutions where possible.
I haven't used it enough to come to any real conclusion, but I can say so far that it's performance is surprisingly good and it's well made.
Now, that said, it came with a fifty foot hose... Fifty feet? How can it possibly work like that? Well it does, so I figured I'd keep all fifty until I determine just how much I need.
The problem was this:
If I'm going to mount a **** vacuum on the wall of the garage, why the heck would I want fifty feet of hose hanging all over the place? I mean, that defeats part of the purpose of hanging the thing on the wall, right?
It will just look sloppy, and we can't have that.
So, I came up with a solution. It's not particularly clever, but at least give me credit for trying.
I recently ordered four 30X30 Gladiator Premier cabinets as a result of a sale a nice member posted here. I've used these things before, and knew they were good.
When the vacuum arrived, I had an idea. Why can't I just hide the hose?
So, I went to Sears and bought one more cabinet.
Using a 2" hole saw, I drilled into the side of the cabinet. After filing the edges of the hole clean, I trimmed it with the same U channel rubber I use in parts of custom computer cases. Pictured are all the tools I used to accomplish the task. Very easy:
Next, I mounted the Gladiator track. I used this instead of mounting the cabinet directly to the wall for a few reasons. Perhaps the most important was ease of adjustment. Also, it allows me to run the cord for the vacuum behind the cabinet to a discreetly recessed outlet that isn't present yet.
As you can see, I mounted the hanger included with the vacuum inside the cabinet, and all fifty feet of hose coils very nicely inside with room to spare:
Closed, you'd never know it was there. No mess of hose clutters up the wall, inviting cobwebs and dust, and generally spoiling appearances and being in the way. It's all hidden away in a cabinet that will match all the others on the adjacent wall.
Tomorrow, I will use the steel peg board panels fitted inside the doors to install clips and hooks for all the vacuum's accessories. Everything will be in one place, and very easy to get to.
Yes... I know I need to cover the floor in some manner, replace the cove base with a matching green product, and I need to paint the door and extend the wall upwards, but one thing at a time.
Don't worry about that clock. I just hung it there to get it out of my way. It's gone tomorrow, I assure you.
It's been a while since the great wall mounted vacuum threads that first notified me of this forum some time ago. It's probably about time various products are considered again. Regardless, I bought one recently.
I picked up a Vacuumaid Garage Vac. I bought it in blue, which is a very nice candy powder finish. Not everyone can pull off candy powder properly, but whoever is coating these things sure got it right.
It's made in the USA, and from the looks of things, quite a bit of it is done by hand. They've been very logical about things, actually, using the simplest solutions where possible.
I haven't used it enough to come to any real conclusion, but I can say so far that it's performance is surprisingly good and it's well made.
Now, that said, it came with a fifty foot hose... Fifty feet? How can it possibly work like that? Well it does, so I figured I'd keep all fifty until I determine just how much I need.
The problem was this:
If I'm going to mount a **** vacuum on the wall of the garage, why the heck would I want fifty feet of hose hanging all over the place? I mean, that defeats part of the purpose of hanging the thing on the wall, right?
It will just look sloppy, and we can't have that.

So, I came up with a solution. It's not particularly clever, but at least give me credit for trying.
I recently ordered four 30X30 Gladiator Premier cabinets as a result of a sale a nice member posted here. I've used these things before, and knew they were good.
When the vacuum arrived, I had an idea. Why can't I just hide the hose?
So, I went to Sears and bought one more cabinet.
Using a 2" hole saw, I drilled into the side of the cabinet. After filing the edges of the hole clean, I trimmed it with the same U channel rubber I use in parts of custom computer cases. Pictured are all the tools I used to accomplish the task. Very easy:
Next, I mounted the Gladiator track. I used this instead of mounting the cabinet directly to the wall for a few reasons. Perhaps the most important was ease of adjustment. Also, it allows me to run the cord for the vacuum behind the cabinet to a discreetly recessed outlet that isn't present yet.
As you can see, I mounted the hanger included with the vacuum inside the cabinet, and all fifty feet of hose coils very nicely inside with room to spare:
Closed, you'd never know it was there. No mess of hose clutters up the wall, inviting cobwebs and dust, and generally spoiling appearances and being in the way. It's all hidden away in a cabinet that will match all the others on the adjacent wall.
Tomorrow, I will use the steel peg board panels fitted inside the doors to install clips and hooks for all the vacuum's accessories. Everything will be in one place, and very easy to get to.
Yes... I know I need to cover the floor in some manner, replace the cove base with a matching green product, and I need to paint the door and extend the wall upwards, but one thing at a time.
Don't worry about that clock. I just hung it there to get it out of my way. It's gone tomorrow, I assure you.
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