mini vacuum cleaner with attachments

Usually leaves our warehouse in 1-2 business days. Commercial and Industrial Central and Portable Vacuum Cleaner Systems, Parts, and Attachments Now you can clean out the most awkward places in the car using only your vacuum cleaner. Simply fit the vaccum tool to your existing vacuum cleaner and the nozzle can be reduced in size right down to 3mm. Universal fittings will fit all sizes of vacuums cleaner.The Mini-Vac kit includes 8 pieces:- 1 adaptor to take 4 fittings: 30, 32, 35 and 38 mm- 1 adjustable suction fitting- 1 extension plastic tube (750mm x 15mm diameter)- 1 angle and 1 straight extensions- 2 small brush heads - 1 crevice tool. The kit is easy to use:1- Simply fix the adaptor to the end of the vacuum cleaner rod.2- Attach the plastic tube to the adaptor3- Add the required nozzle or brush to suit the cleaning job.4- Switch on the cleaner and suck or brushIt's perfect for reaching the places no ordinary cleaner can. In the car it is ideal for cleaning out vents, around the radio, gear sock etc.
In the home and workshop it has 000's of uses, clean around the computer and keyboard without the need for liquid cleaners. In the workshop it will pick up all the bits while leaving nuts and vital screws etc in place. Recommended for cleaning hi-fi and video machines, computer, sewing machines, printers etc. *Please type the letters below Frost Glass Cleaner Aerosol (500ml) Frost Brake and Clutch Cleaner Aerosol (500ml) Frost Fabric Upholstery Cleaner Aerosol (500ml)homemade water vacuum cleaner Frost Carb Cleaner - Carburettor Cleaning Aerosol (500ml)vacuum cleaner duty cycle 7 Piece Attachment Kittop 5 bagless vacuum cleaner FitAll Replacement Upholstery Tool FitAll Wall/Bare Floor Brush
Generic Hoover attachment adaptor Generic Hose for Dyson DC07 Genuine Compact/Tristar Straight Wand Genuine Kirby Tile and Grout Brush Roll Kit for Models G3 - Sentria II Genuine Rainbow E2 Series 11" Swivel Floor BrushMay I introduce you to my new friend - the sewing machine hoover. (Yes, yes, I can hear Alan Partridge in my ear telling me that what I really mean is "vacuum cleaner" since Hoover is a brand name. A few weeks ago I could've sworn my machine was broken. It was spluttering all over the place and getting jammed up good and proper. I unscrewed the needle plate and spent a good couple of hours tinkering with the insides trying to get it working again. In fact, some of you were involved in diagnosing the problem since I was live-tweeting the whole thing (thanks, guys!). Fiiiiinally I found a teeny tiny piece of thread hidden away behind the bobbin holder. That's all the problem was - the smallest bit of thread caught in the system. Which is probably a metaphor for life.
Erm... and I also found this embarrassing state of dust and fluff. Determined to take better care of my machine in future, I invested in a mini hoover to reach the parts that my sewing machine brush can't reach. (When I say invested, I mean £5 on Amazon.) I think it's designed for cleaning computer keyboards so it plugs in as a USB. The suction is fairly weak, but I guess you don't want super strong vacuuming on delicate machinery. It has a little light on it so you can see into dark spaces. The nozzle is flexible so it can reach into tiny crevices, although it does have a tendency to fall off mid-flow, which is slightly annoying. Overall though, I'm very happy with my new gadget!Mini blinds are such a pain to clean, I’ve only done it once in the three years my wife and I have lived in our apartment. They are notorious dirt-catchers because they spend most of their life lying horizontally in front of a window. In Los Angeles, where there is a perpetual rain of microscopic dust floating down, a close-up inspection of white mini blinds can be pretty horrifying.
See, doesn’t that look awful? I’ve been meaning to clean my mini blinds for a while, but it’s actually a fairly involved project. If you want to do a thorough job, you have to carefully dust each individual slat. The slats are held up and separated by thin fabric cords, so dusting each slat actually means dusting four or five different sections. I had seen specialized mini blind dusters in the past, and I wondered how well they worked. I decided to put a specialized duster up against the duster I usually use – A Swiffer Duster. To round out the test, I made my own mini blind duster. I cut a Swiffer Sweeper pad in half and tied each half to my trusty tongs. My test was simple: I cleaned three sets of blinds, all the same size and approximate dust level. I timed how long each cleaning took to determine ease-of-use, and I evaluated the performance of each duster. How much dust could it trap? How much was it leaving behind? Time to clean mini blinds on a 3×6-foot window: 22:16
Performance review: The specialized mini blind cleaner did the worst in our test, both in terms of time and performance. While the three-pronged duster could theoretically two or three times as faster as the other dusters, it was more difficult to slide in between the individual slats. While the microfiber duster did pick up and trap some dust, it got full quickly and started showering clumps of dust down on the window sill. Cleaning the duster would have required running it through the wash, making this project take much longer. Kitchen tongs with Swiffer Sweeper pad. Time to clean blinds: 20:43 Performance review: I imagined it would be difficult to squeeze the tongs with just the right amount of pressure so the tongs wouldn’t get stuck in between the slats. It wasn’t that hard once I got going. I also imagined that I would be cleaning two slats at once. Instead, I used the tongs to grip each slat individually. It didn’t take longer because I was able to move between the slats efficiently.
The Swiffer Sweeper pad did better than the microfiber cloth pad, but it still started shedding dust before I had finished with the blinds. Overall this improvised cleaning tool was an improvement over the blind cleaner, but it still wasn’t perfect. Time to clean blinds: 19:21 Performance review: Although the swiffer duster was the bulkiest tool, I could still get it in between each slat if I lifted the slat above up a little, and clearly that didn’t slow me down, since the Duster had the fastest cleaning time. It also cleaned the most thoroughly, by far. The Swiffer Duster is really a dust-trapping machine. I happened to clean the dirtiest set of mini blinds with the duster, and it didn’t shed at all. The duster could also be shoved into corners and pick up dust the other tools couldn’t grab. After cleaning each set of blinds, I had to give them a quick wipe down with the blinds closed to grab spare dust. There was only one tool I could use for the job – a Swiffer Duster.