Description
OTTOVAC est un appareil de levage à vide électrique portable conçu pour soulever et déplacer du verre et tout autre matériau ayant une surface lisse, plane et non poreuse. L’OTTOVAC fonctionne avec 4 piles AA et est équipé d’un capteur de pression intégré avec une fonction de démarrage/arrêt automatique. Lorsque le vide dans la base de la ventouse atteint -55 kPa, la pompe s’arrête automatiquement après un délai de trois secondes. Lorsque le niveau de vide tombe en dessous de -55 kPa, la pompe redémarre automatiquement, atteignant la pression requise pendant le fonctionnement.
Rodney Cole –
Impressed with this lifter. Really works well. Easy to work and pleasantly surprised with how well it does.
Review Source: dortechdirect.co.uk
Carl Hilton –
Really good bit of kit (so far)
Review Source: dortechdirect.co.uk
Dave Foster –
Amazing tool. I see the activation button is redesigned. In my experience, it started to malfunction around the 6 month mark. If died with the vacuum motor shortly after. It was used in pretty demanding conditions and its last day had some exposure to rain involved.
Review source: Amazon
ZenAtWork –
The only things I’ve been unable to grip with mine are objects in which either:
A. …the surface is SO covered with particulate matter (e.g. covered in sand, dust, powder/flour, etc.) that the device is unable to form a seal, or…
B. …something whose surface is not only irregular, but is also too porous to draw a vacuum against (roll of carpet, pile of pumice stone, a screen door, etc.), or…
C. …something whose surface isn’t capable of supporting itself under any circumstances anyway (a pool of water, a pile of gravel, etc.)
…and you know what? That’s all TOTALLY FAIR.
One doesn’t pick up one of mankind’s most effective electromagnets and then grouse about it “”not working on non-metallic items””, or one of the world’s most-powerful acids, only to whine about it being “”unable to dissolve glass,”” either (or, at least, not without getting promptly lumped into the category of “”humans I hate on principle””).
I CAN lift plywood, drywall/sheetrock/gypsum board/hardiback, tile, granite, marble, glass, metal of any sort, appliances, floor tools, cabinets, furniture… and gods only know what else I’ve yet to discover and/or simply haven’t thought to experiment with yet! Yanno the old saw about “”it’s not heavy, it’s just awkward!””? It’s genuinely shocking how true that actually is. We were able to move a California King mattress wrapped in plastic with NO problems. It was EASY with something to actually get a positive grip on.
Hell: I was able to stick ONE of them to a finished ceiling, HANG PULLEYS from its integrated mounting brackets, and use IT, in turn, to HOIST A 90lb dust collector EIGHT FEET UP A WALL, then REST IT ATOP A SECOND ONE stuck to a bloody FINISHED INTERIOR WALL, tie off the rope, and leave it there – supported only by their respective suctions – until I had time to climb a ladder and lag bolt it in – OVERHEAD, AND BY MYSELF.
Izzy Swan – genius inventor and all-around roaring badass – has done some really, REALLY cool brainstorming videos surrounding the use of them, too (I’m not affiliated in any way, just trés impressed):
youtu.be/dNxj8_S4inQ
youtu.be/sYwtIWYpPvQ?t=12
So has Andrew Klein (equally-genius, equally-badass-of-the-roaring-variety):
youtu.be/V4P-MRnRROE
Yes: they’re expensive. But, I assure you: you’ll be stunned how many applications around the shop you’re likely to find.
One person found this helpful
Review source: Amazon