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Shop Vac suggestions

rktinc

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 25, 2007
Messages
385
Location
Midwest/USA
After using my ancient and nearly worn out 4.5 gal Ridged Shop vac as well as a very handy Ryobi 18v, I have reached the stage of my renovation that I need a large capacity shop vac to start really deep cleaning and de-dusting things on a large scale as I move across the large room of my building renovation.

I have considered just buying another cheap one but I thought maybe someone with job site experience could steer me to a high capacity model that can serve as my workhorse going forward.

Need to clean up the plaster walls, paint scrappings, concrete dust in the floor cracks prior to patching, and a fair amount of sawdust still to make/cleanup. Might also need a wet function after most of the building is super clean to mop of the last layer of scum.

I am thinking about a large capacity Ridge at the HD. Any suggestions?

Ideally, large capacity on wheels, with a large (cheap) filter option.

Thanks,

RKT






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Tdbo

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Joined
Dec 20, 2009
Messages
166
Location
Central Ohio
"Large capacity Ridge at the HD" = best bang for the buck.
I have a several of them. Three are Ridgids. The other is a Craftsman, which at the time was made by Emerson Electric as well.
Although they are noisy, they are true workhorses.
See what they have on sale over the holiday.
This might have some potential:

 

dogdog

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 15, 2011
Messages
12,711
I just use a large ridgid and a dust deputy setup. Will vacuum up about 3x 5gallon buckets before the fine dust clogs up the vacuum filter. Broom to sweep up large debris first.
 

mike93lx

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Joined
Dec 9, 2013
Messages
37,464
Location
Richmond, VA
I recently got a Dewalt stealthsonic 12 gallon at Lowes and have been beating on it pretty good in a remodel project. Working great and it's really quiet. Highly recommend it


I use a Ridgid hose on my other vac (the orange one, about $50) and would recommend it as an upgrade. The basic black hoses that come with vacs aren't great, but the Dewalt's isn't the worst I have used
 

cgrutt

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 4, 2016
Messages
8,203
I have a few Rigids wind up using the 16 gal the most. I have a "hepa" bag and filter in it. Don't think it is true Hepa but seems to work really well and has held up for several projects (sawdust, drywall dust and general construction debris). I also have a Festool and it's a much better VAC for really fine dust but the bags and filters are super expensive so I wind up using the Rigid most of the time. I've had Shop Vac and Craftsman as well put them pretty much same as Rigid really can't go wrong with any of them. Oh, second the optional orange hose with the Ridgid it works great.
 

BTL-A4

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Joined
Feb 28, 2018
Messages
1,252
Location
Santa Clarita
+1 more for Ridgid. I think they have a lifetime guarantee. I have an HD1200 (12 Ga) with a Dust Stopper and it works really well. I have them on a wheeled cart and have been very happy with it.

I have the 18v Ryobi one too and love it, so I'd suggest getting another one. I use mine all the time for the little stuff.
 
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Skellyii

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Joined
Nov 13, 2021
Messages
1,704
Location
KC Area
+1 On the Rigid, I have one that I bought 6 or 7 remodels ago (15+ years) and still going strong
 
OP
R

rktinc

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 25, 2007
Messages
385
Location
Midwest/USA
Great news. My old small Ridgid just won't die so I guess there is a reason. I will probably grab a larger Ridged for more capacity and dust control.

Thanks for he info!
 

908Jim

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 1, 2013
Messages
555
+1 for rigid shop vacs. I've got a small 3 gallon and a larger wheeled model and they have both been excellent to me.
 

phred

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 23, 2009
Messages
525
Location
NC
My big craftsman shop vac from the 1990’s finally died. I just bought one from harbor freight. It is surprising quiet and powerful. Doubt it will last 30 years like the last one but for the money I like it. It also has the opinion to use bags which I like especially when cleaning up hazardous particles that I don’t want to rescatter when dumping the canister.
 

Fav Onefour

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 14, 2022
Messages
700
Location
MN cold and hot
I just use a large ridgid and a dust deputy setup. Will vacuum up about 3x 5gallon buckets before the fine dust clogs up the vacuum filter. Broom to sweep up large debris first.
I have a couple of Ridgid vacs running with dust deputy. Those things help a lot. I have one site running a smaller 4 gallon vac and it does surprisingly well with the dust deputy. That site is an ongoing project with a considerable amount of tuck pointing debris. I didn't want to burn through a good vac with that material so I brought the 4 gallon that already had a lot of hours. I added the dust deputy after the first day on that project. I bet I've already dumped that pail over forty times. The vac is still humming along.
One disadvantage to the setup is pulling it along as you move. I like to pull the vac along with the hose as I work. I would need a cart with the dust deputy setup.
My other setup is in a workshop area and the vac doesn't move. I'm using a Ridgid 16 gallon to pull off some of my machines. I use a long hose connected to the machine outlet. The dust deputy works quite well with that setup. I like being able to easily see when it's getting full. With the setup I'm able to put the vac out of the way under a bench. That helps cut down some of the noise.
That workshop also has a dust collection system with four inch lines. I run the vac more often than the dust collector. The vac is easy and effective for a large portion of the work. The cyclone setup makes it better.

I'm not trying to sell dust cyclones but they help extend run times. The Ridgid vacs seem pretty decent. I needed another vac recently and chose another Ridgid. The new 4 gallon has some improvements such as latch assemblies. It uses the same filter as the older models. That little detail helps keep life simple. I keep spare filters around and swap in new when I'm switching over to finishing cleanup.
 

Mandres

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Joined
Jun 22, 2006
Messages
1,152
From the research I've done, the top 3 are Craftsman, Ridgid, and Bauer (harbor freight). Id go with whichever is available and on sale.
 
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