 |
Paper bags
Dust bags made of paper. These vacuum cleaner bags lets through air but not dust.
Papperspåsar
Micro fiber bags
Dust bags in modern syntethic fibre. Good but expensive.
Pirate dust bags
Usually these dust bags are made out of paper. An alternative that is worth its price.
Pirate bags
|
 |
Filtering Everybody probably has experienced sucking up a valuable little thing by accident. A very expensive piece of jewellery or the kids favourite bit of LEGO doesn’t matter, the consequences are alike and big. And it is easily done. To vacuum clean a kids room is like a balancing act on loose string. By precision you move the nozzle around all the little toys spread around the floor. It doesn’t matter how cautious you are, suddenly you just hear the rattle that announces that an accident has occurred. You the have two options, one is to ignore that it ever happened, the other is to admit it and face the outcome: To dissect the belly of the machine to try to retrieve the valuable little thing. The belly is the vacuum cleaning bag. It often ends in catastrophe, the bag breaks and the dust is spread al around the room. In the worst case scenario there are no more dust bags and you’ll have to broom it up..
how do you avois it?
Vacuum cleaner manufacturers often supply you with different kinds of nozzles for different purposes. What the don’t supply you with is some kind of net or filter to put over the nozzle. By doing so you avoid sucking up small items. Since it is not supplied you have to be creative.
How do you do it?
The most simple way to make a filter is to use an old nylon stocking and to slip it on over the nozzle. The fine netting will block all of the bigger items but let the dust and air flow past.
Over and out!
|
|
 |
|  |