FTR, I have a motorized vacuum station, albeit not a pace/hakko. A company I work with also has one.. I think it's an Auyoue?... collecting dust.
'works fine' until you ruin pads.
you'll run into thermals and ground planes that just won't clear out with passive suckers. you need to keep applying heat to get the solder out of such holes.
There is no functional difference. If you need more or less heat, you control that with the soldering iron tip, temp, and duration of application. You have full control. I suppose some people are not as deft at using two hands at the same time, though.

I don't know how you could even lift a pad. I have the tip of the iron pressed on the pad, holding it down, until after the suction is over. If you're doing some weird thing where you're trying to switch the iron and the sucker and jam the button, all at the same time, you're doing it wrong.
1. Position sucker
2. Apply tip of iron to joint, sliding it under the tip of the sucker
3. Tilt sucker to form a good suction over the tip of the soldering iron, which takes a fraction of a second, easily accomplished by the time the joint is thoroughly molten. (After several uses, the tip will melt to the shape of your usual iron tips, but you can easily notch it with a knife).
4. Press button at your leisure.
5. Remove sucker and iron.
this hobby or field has costs. if you cheap-out, you get lesser results. I've ruined my share of boards by using substandard tools.
If it's an irreplaceable board, I will use the solder sucker and the soldering iron, not the motorized tool with the slow response and bulky tip and the relatively higher temp needed to get the solder to suck up without clogging inside the tool.
A solder sucker can be successfully used at lower temps to the joint. That's scientific fact, AFAIC.

The solder only has to be molten at the pad. It can be frozen solid by the rushing air as soon as it leaves the pad. There's no metal tube where the solder can adhere and clog.