a vacuum cleaner uses air to create suction. in a vacuum there is no air. Therefore, the aswer is NO.
Although it is called a vacuum cleaner, it does not actually create a vacuum. Inside the cleaner there is an electric motor which drives a fan blade. This fan blows air out of the vacuum cleaner and this causes air to be drawn in to the cleaner at the other end. Thus the cleaner works by creating an air flow, not a vacuum.
air presure pushes dirt into the vacuum cleaner.
No there is no air in a vacuum cleaner
No. A vacuum cleaner sucks in air. A hair dryer blows out air.
The filter in a vacuum cleaner separates dust from air. Air is allowed to pass through whereas dust is trapped by the filter and caught in the bag/cylinder of the vacuum cleaner.
Both a vacuum cleaner and a tornado generate low pressure that pulls air inward.
The make of vacuum is not as important as making sure that the vacuum cleaner is a HEPA vacuum. This stands for High Efficiency Particulate Air. They remove around 99.97% of allergens in furniture and carpets.
Where it says vacuum hose
No. First of all it wouldn't stay on the ground. and why would you need to vacuum?A vacuum cleaner depends on a difference in air pressure to operate. With no air pressure in space, there could be no difference in air pressure and thus no operation.Inside a manned spacecraft, which is usually pressurized a vacuum cleaner will obviously work just fine; especially for collecting and disposing of water globules. Also the standard NASA space toilet uses a modification of a vacuum cleaner for urine collection.
High Efficiency Particulate Air filters are a final filter on a vacuum cleaner. They remove all but the very finest particles. This means that the air the cleaner exhausts is cleaner, making them much better for persons with allergies.
Remove the vacuum hose from the sensor. Pull the sensor out of the air cleaner housing. Insert the new sensor into the air cleaner housing and attach the vacuum hose.