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Carpet Cleaners Reviews
Updated June 2008
We found a serious lack of professional carpet cleaner testing, leading us to user reviews for the best sources of information. Consumers are both thrilled with and vexed by carpet cleaners and offer up plenty of detailed performance descriptions on retail websites. Amazon.com has by far the largest collection of opinions - some models receive hundreds of reviews -- followed by Target.com, Epinions and Sears.com. Large home improvement stores, including Lowe's and Home Depot, weren't much help. We found few or no reviews for carpet cleaners on their websites. Consumer Reports hasn't examined carpet cleaners since 2003, much to the disappointment of subscribers, many of whom have begged editors for a report in comments posted on the Consumer Reports blog. Editors have recently posted a response to the pleas, stating that a report is planned for 2009. We found only a couple of sources that seemed to test carpet cleaning machines, although none of them shared testing procedures, calling into question whether models were actually tested. Rather, on sites like About.com, reviewers seem to base opinions simply on product claims. ConsumerGuide.com is another such source. It reviews eleven machines but doesn't share testing methodology. ConsumerGuide does offer more lengthy reviews and quick pro-and-con summaries, as well as top picks. About.com's Guide to Appliances, Barbara Whiting, takes a similar approach, singling out a handful of machines without disclosing how she came to choose them. Though we didn't find a large number of sources, we found consistency among the reviews used for our research. Clear frontrunners emerged for each of the different types of carpet cleaning machines, and we also found patterns of opinion when it comes to poor performers. While advertising may lead shoppers to believe that carpet cleaners will
leave carpets looking brand new, experts like David Ristenbatt of Ristenbatt
Vacuum Service warn otherwise: "Hot water extractors work best when
used to periodically clean carpets which are lightly soiled. Performance
on a heavily soiled or stained carpet can be disappointing at best." Reviews
say frequent vacuuming and spot pre-treating will increase an extractor's
effectiveness, but be aware that none of these machines will completely
remove tough stains that have been in your carpet for a while. We found more negative reviews of portable or "spot" carpet cleaners than upright cleaners, with the consensus being so clear that a few models emerged as definite lemons to avoid. Each of the big three names in carpet cleaning, Hoover, Bissell and Dirt Devil, make a portable model with problems. The least expensive of the pack, the Dirt Devil Spot Scrubber SE2800 (* est. $30), receives a low average rating on Amazon.com. - 2.5 stars of a possible five with well over 130 reviews. Owners say it doesn't clean well and leaves the carpet very wet, even spraying dirty water through its exhaust vents. Others say it leaks. Several said that manually agitating stains with a brush and spray carpet cleaner yields better results. Still others comment that it's very noisy. Hoover's portable carpet cleaner is a cordless, upright model. The SteamVac Spot Carpet Cleaner F5505 (* est. $120) is heavy among portables, weighing 24 pounds, but it does fold down for easy storage. Hoover also boasts that its "StairFit" design allows the unit to sit on a step while cleaning. Though we found just six reviews of this unit on Amazon.com, five of them reported that their units broke shortly after purchase. Those owners also say the SteamVac Spot doesn't suction very well, leaving the carpet wet. Bissell's Cordless Spot Lifter 2X Handheld Deep Cleaner 1719-B (*est. $40) also gets mixed reviews. While some say it works and praise its convenience, the majority of users at Target.com pan the Spot Lifter as a leaky machine that doesn't suction well and takes way too long (12 hours) to charge. Many users on Amazon.com like this model, especially for pets, but one says it spits sucked-up fluid through the air vents. Among spot carpet cleaners, we found much more consistent reviews for a more expensive model, the Bissell SpotBot (*est. $130) . ... Continued
Our Consensus Report shows how many times products are top-ranked by reviewers included in our We found the greatest number of favorable reviews for the Hoover SteamVac with Clean Surge F5914-900, followed by the Bissell 9400M ProHeat 2X Select upright and the Bissell QuickSteamer PowerBrush 2080. The Hoover F5914-900 has acquired over 490 very favorable user reviews on Amazon.com, giving us a good measure of how it will hold up over time. Owner reviews for other Hoover models are not as favorable. The Bissell 9400M is also favorably reviewed on Amazon.com. It just doesn't have as many reviews or quite the same rating level as the Hoover. For those on a budget or for light duty, we found good reviews for the Bissell QuickSteamer PowerBrush 2080, but this carpet cleaner has a smaller tank and less powerful motor than others. We found mixed reviews for small portable steam cleaners like the Bissell SpotLifter, but generally better ones for the Bissell Little Green Pro. The most complimentary owner-written reviews we uncovered, however, belong to the pricier Bissell SpotBot. Advertisement
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