If you continue to vaccuum throughout the curing process the resin is basically boiling, vaccuum reduces the boiling point of liquids expanding any air bubbles and bringing them to the top of the mould where they are evacuated, if the resin starts to `go off` then these expanded bubbles will still try to reach the surface and the casting will virtually invert itself and you will be left with a mess. When you allow the chamber to reach normal atmospheric pressure the bubbles will acutally shrink by which time hopefully they have been brought to the surface and degassed away,if you were then to pressurise the system the bubbles would actually shrink further and become microscopic. So in short, vaccuum enlarges the bubbles so they float out and pressure shrinks the bubbles so that you cant see them.
if your pressure casting the resin can cure under pressure, in fact thats the correct way to do it, the microscopic bubbles are trapped in the cured resin.
Vacuum cleaners are rated at between 6-7 inches of mercury while a good vacuum pump is 27 -29 absolute vacuum being 29.92 so there is a vast difference in the `power` of the vacuum . i`m sure a vacuum cleaner or an air conditioning pump would be o.k but basically its not going to have the power to `suck` the tiny bubbles through all the twists and turns in your mould and bring them to the surface, your not going to get the same results, i`ve had pumps with just a small drop in vacuum and the castings look like a pin cushion. If you could get the same results everone would be buying a £40 vacuum cleaner instead of a £2000 (new price)vacuum pump and 2k is for a small one.
You can get a reasonable second hand pump for the £150-£200 mark but thats only going to be about 8-9CMH(cubic metres per hour) with a 300mmX300mm chamber its going to pump it down in about 60 seconds so with a fast cast you only have another 60 seconds to mix your resin pour it in the moulds and get it in the chamber, release the vacuum and get it out again, in the summer months you can halve that.
So either get a smaller chamber, a bigger pump or a longer cure resin.
Edwards pumps are the best, look for SPEEDIVAC they are old hat now so a lot of laboratories get rid of them and they are very powerful and quite cheap because they are older models.