Originally posted by: Eli
Probably just depends. If you suck one up and then keep vacuuming, they will get burried under new dirt/debris and won't be able to get out. But if you just turn on the vacuum for a second to suck one up and then turn it off, it's probably still alive and coud theoretically find its way out.. eventually.
Originally posted by: TallBill
Originally posted by: Eli
Probably just depends. If you suck one up and then keep vacuuming, they will get burried under new dirt/debris and won't be able to get out. But if you just turn on the vacuum for a second to suck one up and then turn it off, it's probably still alive and coud theoretically find its way out.. eventually.
and it'll be one hell of a pissed off spider.
Originally posted by: Midlander
I know it's a strange question, but I wonder if anyone has checked. If they don't die immediately, do they find their way back out? Shop vacs don't have much of a barrier to the escape route.
Originally posted by: BillGates
I think some vacuums have impeller blades of some kind, so they could be chopped up if they're unlucky.
Originally posted by: TallBill
Originally posted by: BillGates
I think some vacuums have impeller blades of some kind, so they could be chopped up if they're unlucky.
Yes, impeller blades.. that must be teh key.
Originally posted by: mercanucaribe
Originally posted by: TallBill
Originally posted by: BillGates
I think some vacuums have impeller blades of some kind, so they could be chopped up if they're unlucky.
Yes, impeller blades.. that must be teh key.
Don't most vacuums have the blades behind the bag?
Originally posted by: TallBill
Originally posted by: BillGates
I think some vacuums have impeller blades of some kind, so they could be chopped up if they're unlucky.
Yes, impeller blades.. that must be teh key.
Originally posted by: ISAslot
No. The effects of the vacuum places them in a dimensional rift above your bed where they randomly drop out and into your mouth while you sleep.
Originally posted by: Aharami
i actually did this once. sucked up a quarter sized spider with the hose attachment (not the brush part). so the spider got sucked up intact. I have a bagless and the canister is clear, so I could see the spider in there trying to get out. I turned the vacuum on and watched the spider go round and round in the whirlwind. But even after a while, the spider didnt die, it was moving around. I figured if the spider can take that kind of a beating AND still climb out somehow, it deserves to live. So i just left it in the canister and eventually forgot about it. A week or so later, I remembered about it out of the blue and when I checked up on it, it was still there, but it was lifeless and curled up.
I guess the injuries it suffered during the whirlwind caused it to die eventually.
Vacuum - 1
Spider - 0