Editor's Take
What it's actually like to live with
The INALSA WD 10 sells more units than any other wet-dry vacuum in India, and the reason is simple - it works well enough at a price most middle-class families can justify.
At Rs 5,500-6,500, it is the entry point where you get genuinely useful wet-dry capability rather than a toy. The 17 kPa suction picks up dal spills, chai stains, and post-rangoli cleaning without drama.
The Safe Buoy Technology is the real hero feature. In Indian homes where someone inevitably overfills the tank during monsoon floor mopping or post-festival cleaning, this float mechanism stops the motor before water reaches it. Without this, water in the motor means a dead vacuum - and it happens more often than you would think.
The HEPA filter handles fine dust effectively, important in Indian cities with high PM2.5 levels. The plastic build is the obvious cost-cutting measure, and it feels lighter but less durable than the stainless steel Karcher. Noise is noticeable - apartment neighbours will know when you are cleaning.
For a 1-2 BHK apartment where budget matters, the WD 10 delivers genuine value without pretending to be something it is not.

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