Discuss Which wet/dry vac and powerflusher? in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

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ive just been looking at this aswell but it doesnt say whether you have to change the filters or not when going from wet to dry, ive emailed them, anybody own it?

I don't think you do as the replacement filters are both wet and dry.
 
think i'll be ordering it aswell, looks like it comes with a cheap paper filter though so the real price is £45
 
Looks like I have the earlier model than this and as I stated earlier (grey body and black lid), I only use it for wet work and so no filter required ( all the crap just collects in the bucket).

For dry work it has a paper filter that you attach to motor by an elastic band.
It just collects the dust in the bag instead of dumping it into the bucket.
 
This main sound really stupid, but what are the main uses for a wet and dry vac?

draining tanks and cisterns
removing water from pipework/under floor pipework to enable soldering
situations with no doc, just cut and suck the water up
cleaning/drying up spills and leaks

once you have used one you will wonder how you managed with out it.
 
I use it less than I did in the past but do find it really useful.


Remebered to do all those nuts up now then :grin:
 
You can pick up the Kamco CF30 for about 800 quid. If you can stretch to it, the CF90's the dogs bx
 
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