Two dominant vehicle types work in sewer networks: the vacuum truck and the combined sewer cleaning (jet-vac) truck. Below we compare how they work, their strengths, and when each makes sense.

What is a vacuum truck?

A vacuum truck uses a vacuum pump to suction sewage, septic waste and industrial liquids into a single tank. Core elements:

  • Vacuum pump: liquid ring (~7,000–9,000 m³/h) or dry type.
  • Single tank for all collected waste.
  • Discharge: hydraulic or pneumatic tipping.

It only suctions — it does not jet out hard blockages.

What is a sewer cleaning truck?

A combined unit adds high-pressure jetting (often 100–250 bar) to break up obstructions, then vacuums the debris. Typical equipment:

  • High-pressure pump: 100–250 bar, 150–425 L/min.
  • Vacuum pump: ~4,100–9,000 m³/h.
  • Dual tanks: clean water and debris.
  • Hose reels: main (~120 m) and auxiliary (~60 m).

Key differences

FeatureVacuum truckCombined sewer cleaner
Clearing blockagesNoYes — high-pressure jet
Waste suctionYesYes
Tank layoutSingleClean + debris
Pipe wall cleaningNoYes
Typical useSeptic, liquid wasteBlocked sewers + cleaning
CostLowerHigher (two systems)

When to choose which

Prefer a vacuum truck

  • Septic and liquid waste hauling.
  • No need to break mineral/roots blockages.
  • Budget-sensitive fleet.

Prefer a combined sewer cleaner

  • Sand, gravel and grease blockages.
  • Periodic wall cleaning and capacity restoration.
  • Municipal sewer operations.
  • One vehicle for jetting and removal.

One platform, two jobs

Combined trucks replace separate jetting and vacuum units for many utilities — saving fleet size and labour. Teknik Tanker builds 5–20 ton solutions. Contact our engineering team via the quote form.