The older "canister" type of vacuum cleaners or the newer shop vacs have this capability, but upright vacuums do not usually have this ability. It would be better to take the time to blow it up with your breath, so it does not pop.
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.
The fan powered by a motor creates suction which pulls the dust into the cleaner nozzle (head) into the bag, filters or cyclones.
The lack of air in the flexible plastic causes it to suck in to a flat surface. Just like when you suck the air out of a bag, it wrinkles in together.
Using suction.
If the vacuum cleaner is powered by electricity this is used to turn the electric motor which is needed to create the suction or vacuum. That motor either has permanent magnets inside it, or the current passes through many "turns" of wire to create magnets when you switch the cleaner on. Early experiment in electricity showed that if a wire is moved in a magnetic field some current is created. Similarly, if a magnet is moved near to a wire the same result occurs. So, yes the cleaner does need a magnet.
The opposite of a compressor. A vacumn cleaner is a suction device. Were you ever on a baby bottle. You used suction to get the formular out of there. A suction machine sucks!
To suction the dirt out of your carpet
Example sentence - The vacuum cleaner no longer had adequate suction to clean the rugs.
The vacuum cleaner uses suction to pick things up off the ground
By creating suction
2000 mm of water
a vacuum cleaner uses air to create suction. in a vacuum there is no air. Therefore, the aswer is NO.
You check its suction at how much it can suck
When was the last time you cleaned the pool filter?????
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.
A machine for cleaning carpets, tapestry, upholstered work, etc., by suction.
Ebay has one listed at £107.00