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From First Charge to Fading Battery: Long-Term Lessons From Using Kärcher WV 6 Plus and Bosch GlassVAC

From First Charge to Fading Battery: Long-Term Lessons From Using Kärcher WV 6 Plus and Bosch GlassVAC

If your winter mornings start with wiping “crying” bedroom windows and your evenings end with a fogged-up shower screen, a window vac is one of those gadgets that quietly changes the mood at home. Instead of juggling paper towels and an old T-shirt, you spray the glass, take one slow swipe and the dirty water disappears into a tank instead of running down into the frame. That means fewer streaks catching the light, less damp sitting on sills, and less chance of mould around seals. For busy people—commuters, parents, pet homes—it also means you’re not spending ten extra minutes every day doing the most boring kind of cleaning. When you’re picking a window vac, the things that really matter are simple: how long it runs before you have to recharge, how heavy it feels after a few minutes above shoulder height, how often you need to stop to empty the tank, and whether it can handle both big windows and smaller surfaces like tiles and mirrors without leaving a mess behind.

Over one long, damp season I lived with the Kärcher WV 6 Plus and the Bosch GlassVAC side by side, and they naturally fell into different roles. The WV 6 Plus is the “big job” machine: Kärcher says it can run for around 100 minutes and cover up to roughly 300 m² on one charge, with a wide 280 mm head and a larger dirty-water tank. In real life, that meant I could do the living-room windows, balcony doors and both shower screens in one go without worrying about the battery icon, and usually only emptied the tank once. It feels like a proper tool in the hand—noticeable but still manageable—and that wide blade means fewer passes on tall panes. The Bosch GlassVAC takes the opposite approach: it’s shorter, lighter and more compact, with a run time of about 30 minutes, designed to cover roughly 35 windows or around 105 m² per charge, and a smaller 100 ml tank. On paper that sounds like “less”, but in day-to-day use it fits quick jobs perfectly: bathroom mirror, shower glass, bedroom windows, even the car windscreen. Bosch’s wiper-rubber, borrowed from its car wiper technology, glides very smoothly on small panes and tiles and is forgiving if you don’t have perfect technique.

Everyday key spec

Kärcher WV 6 Plus

Bosch GlassVAC Cordless Window Vac

Typical runtime

Long sessions, whole-house runs

Shorter bursts, one or two rooms

Coverage per charge

Suits lots of big glass

Suits smaller areas, fewer windows

Dirty-water tank

Larger, fewer empties

Smaller, empties quickly in the sink

In-hand feel

More “power tool”, wider head

More compact, easier in tight spaces

Best at

Large windows, patio doors, showers

Mirrors, small windows, tiles, car glass

After a few months, the pattern became obvious. The WV 6 Plus is the one you grab when you’re in “let’s do this properly” mode: weekend resets, post-storm clean-ups, days when the whole house feels damp and you want to hit every big window in one loop. You accept a bit more weight in exchange for not having to think about the battery or the tank. The GlassVAC is the everyday fixer: it lives near the bathroom or back door, comes out for fogged mirrors, wet shower glass and the odd splashback spill, and because it’s small and light you don’t talk yourself out of using it. If your main headache is “lots of large glass, and I want to deal with it in one session”, the Kärcher rhythm will probably fit you better; if your reality is frequent small jobs where convenience matters more than sheer endurance, the Bosch slips into that role more naturally. Both models sit in a similar price bracket and prices and deals change often, so use the current listings on the product pages as your final reference.