Da

DIYGUY

20/12/2004 8:35 PM

Sucks no more ...

The shop vac that is. Almost dead but hasn't died yet and I keep
waiting for it to go because I hate the scream it makes and am tired of
always having to put on my ear muffs just to start it up for a few
seconds of cleaning up. So I am thinking I just might get the P-C 7812
at Amazon. The price is up there when compared to others but what is my
hearing worth? Plus I hope to get a better tool. Before I make the
leap and have to live with another tool that I should have done my
homework on before I buy it and have to learn to love it, who among you
own one and what advice do you have? Would you buy it again? Is it as
good as the reviewers on Amazon claim? Let me "hear" from you...


This topic has 8 replies

mm

mare*Remove*All*0f*This*I*Hate*Spammers*@mac.invalid.com (mare)

in reply to DIYGUY on 20/12/2004 8:35 PM

21/12/2004 8:08 AM

makesawdust <[email protected]> wrote:

> DIYGUY Wrote:
> > The shop vac that is. Almost dead but hasn't died yet and I keep
> > waiting for it to go because I hate the scream it makes and am tired
> > of
> > always having to put on my ear muffs just to start it up for a few
> > seconds of cleaning up. So I am thinking I just might get the P-C
> > 7812
> > at Amazon. The price is up there when compared to others but what is
> > my
> > hearing worth? Plus I hope to get a better tool. Before I make the
> > leap and have to live with another tool that I should have done my
> > homework on before I buy it and have to learn to love it, who among
> > you
> > own one and what advice do you have? Would you buy it again? Is it as
> > good as the reviewers on Amazon claim? Let me "hear" from you...
>
> I have a Ridgid shop vac and I would definitely get another one.

WHAT?

Sorry, I couldn't hear you. My Ridgid shop vac was on.

I have one as well and it does make a lot of noise. Certainly compared
to my Festo CT 22. The latter sucks better too. I have the Ridgid
attached to my table saw. With a switch next to the table saw switch so
I *do* turn it on (and off!). The CT 22 is used for routing,
biscuitting, sanding and when I use my Festo circular hand saw to rip
big sheets.

--
mare

MJ

Mark & Juanita

in reply to DIYGUY on 20/12/2004 8:35 PM

20/12/2004 8:22 PM

On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 21:17:05 -0500, "TaskMule" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
>"DIYGUY" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> The shop vac that is. Almost dead but hasn't died yet and I keep
>> waiting for it to go because I hate the scream it makes and am tired of
>> always having to put on my ear muffs just to start it up for a few
>> seconds of cleaning up. So I am thinking I just might get the P-C 7812
>> at Amazon. The price is up there when compared to others but what is my
>> hearing worth? Plus I hope to get a better tool. Before I make the
>> leap and have to live with another tool that I should have done my
>> homework on before I buy it and have to learn to love it, who among you
>> own one and what advice do you have? Would you buy it again? Is it as
>> good as the reviewers on Amazon claim? Let me "hear" from you...
>
>I firmly believe that during development all shop vacs are taken to the
>Pratt & Whitney engine test room.
>They run the jet engine and shop vac at the same time. When the jet engine
>can't be heard over the shop vac they know the shop vac is ready for
>production.
>

Windex time again! LOL

b

in reply to DIYGUY on 20/12/2004 8:35 PM

21/12/2004 12:25 PM

On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 20:35:01 -0500, DIYGUY <[email protected]>
wrote:

>The shop vac that is. Almost dead but hasn't died yet and I keep
>waiting for it to go because I hate the scream it makes and am tired of
>always having to put on my ear muffs just to start it up for a few
>seconds of cleaning up. So I am thinking I just might get the P-C 7812
>at Amazon. The price is up there when compared to others but what is my
>hearing worth? Plus I hope to get a better tool. Before I make the
>leap and have to live with another tool that I should have done my
>homework on before I buy it and have to learn to love it, who among you
>own one and what advice do you have? Would you buy it again? Is it as
>good as the reviewers on Amazon claim? Let me "hear" from you...



I have the next size up.

it's a good machine. the layout and features are well thought out.
it's quiet and has plenty of power. it has very good dust filtration.

the plastic trim parts- hubcaps particularly- haven't fared too well.

Tu

"TaskMule"

in reply to DIYGUY on 20/12/2004 8:35 PM

20/12/2004 9:17 PM


"DIYGUY" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The shop vac that is. Almost dead but hasn't died yet and I keep
> waiting for it to go because I hate the scream it makes and am tired of
> always having to put on my ear muffs just to start it up for a few
> seconds of cleaning up. So I am thinking I just might get the P-C 7812
> at Amazon. The price is up there when compared to others but what is my
> hearing worth? Plus I hope to get a better tool. Before I make the
> leap and have to live with another tool that I should have done my
> homework on before I buy it and have to learn to love it, who among you
> own one and what advice do you have? Would you buy it again? Is it as
> good as the reviewers on Amazon claim? Let me "hear" from you...

I firmly believe that during development all shop vacs are taken to the
Pratt & Whitney engine test room.
They run the jet engine and shop vac at the same time. When the jet engine
can't be heard over the shop vac they know the shop vac is ready for
production.

Ds

Dan

in reply to DIYGUY on 20/12/2004 8:35 PM

21/12/2004 3:31 AM

On Mon 20 Dec 2004 08:17:05p, "TaskMule" <[email protected]>
wrote in news:[email protected]:

> I firmly believe that during development all shop vacs are taken to
> the Pratt & Whitney engine test room.
> They run the jet engine and shop vac at the same time. When the jet
> engine can't be heard over the shop vac they know the shop vac is
> ready for production.

I concur. :-)
I built a box on casters, lined it with carpet, put in holes for the hose
and the cord, and then a bunch of one-inch holes at the back for the
exhaust. One of my smarter moments, even if I did get the idea from Home
Handyman. The shop vac is only a little louder than the DC now. When it
was down in the basement, SWMBO said the difference was amazing. Before
the box, she had to go upstairs to hear somebody on the phone. After it
was in the box, she didn't even have to turn up the sound on the TV.

Having a spare work surface on wheels with a power strip, that's not much
bigger than the vac's footprint and a place to store all the attachments
are added bonuses. Right now the planer's sitting on it.

I know we have this conversation every six months or so, but I haven't
built a whole lot of shop enhancements that were this cheap with that
much payback, so I talk about it. Over and over.

The fun part is showing it to friends. Turn it on, they say "Well, that's
not exactly quiet." Open the door, watch their eyes get big. "OH. I see.
Hm. Okay, that's a difference. Shut the door."

jj

jo4hn

in reply to DIYGUY on 20/12/2004 8:35 PM

21/12/2004 3:40 PM

Dan wrote:

> On Mon 20 Dec 2004 08:17:05p, "TaskMule" <[email protected]>
> wrote in news:[email protected]:
>
>
>>I firmly believe that during development all shop vacs are taken to
>>the Pratt & Whitney engine test room.
>>They run the jet engine and shop vac at the same time. When the jet
>>engine can't be heard over the shop vac they know the shop vac is
>>ready for production.
>
>
> I concur. :-)
> I built a box on casters, lined it with carpet, put in holes for the hose
> and the cord, and then a bunch of one-inch holes at the back for the
> exhaust. [snip]

Great idea, Dan. Well worth plagiarizing.
mahalo,
jo4hn

JG

"Jim Giblin"

in reply to DIYGUY on 20/12/2004 8:35 PM

21/12/2004 4:08 AM

The sound volume of my Craftsman Shot Vac finally made me get a Fein Turbo
II. The Fein, like the PC7812, can be activated by the on/off switch on a
power tool (router, sander, etc) plugged into the vac. However, my
understanding is that switch on the Fein is rated for 15 amps while the PC
is rated significantly less. If you plan on using higher amp tools (like a
router) this may be a concern.


"DIYGUY" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The shop vac that is. Almost dead but hasn't died yet and I keep
> waiting for it to go because I hate the scream it makes and am tired of
> always having to put on my ear muffs just to start it up for a few
> seconds of cleaning up. So I am thinking I just might get the P-C 7812
> at Amazon. The price is up there when compared to others but what is my
> hearing worth? Plus I hope to get a better tool. Before I make the
> leap and have to live with another tool that I should have done my
> homework on before I buy it and have to learn to love it, who among you
> own one and what advice do you have? Would you buy it again? Is it as
> good as the reviewers on Amazon claim? Let me "hear" from you...

mm

makesawdust

in reply to DIYGUY on 20/12/2004 8:35 PM

21/12/2004 4:47 AM


DIYGUY Wrote:
> The shop vac that is. Almost dead but hasn't died yet and I keep
> waiting for it to go because I hate the scream it makes and am tire
> of
> always having to put on my ear muffs just to start it up for a few
> seconds of cleaning up. So I am thinking I just might get the P-
> 7812
> at Amazon. The price is up there when compared to others but what i
> my
> hearing worth? Plus I hope to get a better tool. Before I make the
> leap and have to live with another tool that I should have done my
> homework on before I buy it and have to learn to love it, who amon
> you
> own one and what advice do you have? Would you buy it again? Is it as
> good as the reviewers on Amazon claim? Let me "hear" from you...

I have a Ridgid shop vac and I would definitely get another one

--
makesawdust


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