Oreck Buster B XL PRO 5 Compact Canister Vacuum Cleaner – BB900-DGR
- Weighs only 5 lbs.
- 11 accessories and attachments included
- Uses hypo-allergenic disposable dust bags
- 30-foot commercial grade power cord
- Telescopic extension wand
The Oreck XL Compact Vacuum is an extremely powerful vacuum cleaner. This vacuum is so strong it can pick up a 16 pound bowling ball. The vacuum comes with eight handy attachments, including a flexible hose. The engineering created a quieter, high-vortex motor that is 50% more powerful than before. The Oreck Compact Vacuum is ideal for all those hard to reach places and there are at least 101 uses for this amazing cleaner, according to Oreck. Lastly this powerful vacuum uses a hypo-allergenic disposable bag, with a dust-free seal. The Oreck XL Compact Vacuum is a must have for those looking for power and light weight.
List Price: $ 199.00
Price: $ 134.94
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I Like this Vacuum,
I don’t understand why this vac doesn’t get more attention here on Amazon. I kept dismissing it because there was very little info and the one star review. It was three times the price of the Eureka 71B that I was considering as my top choice.
Eureka 71B Hand-Held Vacuum
After some availability problems for the 71B I came to realize I didn’t really want or need the roller brush on my quick use hand held vac. We have a lot of long hair in our family and I would be always cutting it out of the roller brush, like I have to do with our large main carpet vac.
I reconsidered my price range and looked at the Hoover Porta Power and the Oreck XL Pro that I am reviewing here.
Hoover Commercial Portapower Vacuum Cleaner, 8.3 Lbs, Black
Once I looked at the online owner’s manuals for both of these I chose the Oreck because there is a replaceable filter for the motor (comes with a package of filter bags ) that is not owner replaceable on the Hoover. Another consideration is the way the motor/fan is to the rear of the filter bag on the Oreck rather than on one side and bellow on the Hoover; that made sense from an engineering perspective. On the Hoover the dirt flies into the bag and ends up as a layer that the motor has to suck air through thus restricting the flow as the bag fills rather than on the Oreck the motor is on the opposite end the dirt comes into so at least the majority will fall out of the stream of air which can pass over the top of the pile of dirt and have less restriction until the bag fills up.
The housing of the Oreck is smaller because of this and it works better, at least in theory, so seems like sound design to me. Speaking of sound the Oreck is plenty quiet. That was one of the most important factors for me. I am adament I will not have another vacuum that is so loud I must wear ear plugs to protect my hearing. I depend on my hearing for work and want to do all I can to gaurd against damage. I am pleased with the Oreck. It has a quite tolerable sound level. I had read here the Hoover Porta Power is on the loud side. I have not actually heard one so I can not say for sure.
Some mentioned the short hose and the awkwardness of using this vac. I can see what they ment. Hmmmm. I am still learning to work around this. Then I realized the Eureka 71B would have been more awkward to do the same things and could not have been as versatile as my Oreck.
My Oreck. Yes I am keeping it. I like it.
The awkwardness is the shortness of the hose I think. I will put on a longer hose from another vac and report back. For wall vacuuming using the wider smooth floor attatchment ( which works on carpets too ) and the extension wand ( which is quality and works great ) the short hose seems just right and no problem. Cleaning up small messes with the hose and the small floor tool goes very well. It is just that with the same set up I mentioned for walls but used on the floor the hose is just a bit too short.
The short hose is good for dusting shelves, books, displays etc using the REAL horse hair brush. Quite a nice brush with lots of bristles. Makes all the plastic bristled brushes I have had look like a different animal. Dustiing in this manner is one of the main reasons I bought a handheld and this would have been silly to do with the Eureka 71B. I realize this now but couldn’t see it when I was ordering. Oreck has a shoulder strap the 71B does not.
One advantage the Hoover Porta Power seems to have is a loovered door over the exhaust to help dispers and direct the blast of air down rather than straight behind the vac. The Oreck has a tube that is bent so you can decide which direction you want the blast to go by rotating this dog leg tube. I think perhaps a better way to go is put a small cloth bag over the exhaust to diffuse the stream. I supose this has been done and found lacking. In theary a person could rubber band a sock over this exhaust tube on the Oreck. I have yet to go there.
About the accessories rack and the accessories not staying on : No problems here ! The brush fits loose on the outboard holder but fits fine on the middle one which has the ability to flex and so accommodate it; the small floor tool fits snug on the outboard holder and the crevice tool drops into a rectangular hole in the holder and so that is just fine. Once you get it you will see it is obvious the floor tool goes on the outboard because it is too wide across the floor/dirt entry end to be in the middle of the holder anyway…
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Oreck Pro handheld vac,
I’ve had one of these vacs for a few years. I use to keep my work sites clean when I’m doing final finishing on remodel projects. It’s a lot handier than a shop vacuum and it is surprisingly powerful. I use it for cleaning up tile work, finish sanding, light routing, and a bunch of other jobs that don’t call for my 14 gallon, 5.5 horsepower shop vacuum.
Even though it gets tossed around like the rest of our power tools, it’s still in good shape and doing what we need. If we do manage to break this one, we’ll buy another.
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