Aeolian Dave's Roaming Report

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It's the Cat's Ass! LOL Woulda said Cat's Pajama

Now I have a selection of machines to scrub & grind & buff. Pete found this red Electrolux washer/polisher to match the 86 & 88, just like his; luv those handle knobs.

And I just know I can cobble up suitable brush strips to fix to the Hoover so it'll do its thing. Already have a substitute nozzle in mind for the second one...

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Embarrasment of Riches.

There's no point being shy about it. It is what it is. I'm a very lucky vacationer.

Here's the whole haul plus included the first Monitor because I am in awe of this design.

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Another Full Monty shot with flash for detail

Yep, everything here fit behind the front seats below the windowsills, well, Pete's red polisher rode it out in back splayed across the rear pile.

Did I mention that every hose here holds suction?

Gonna need me some more Lowes shelving units. More immediately, I need to rustle up some dinner, right now.

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Thinkin' the Lux will have to do the heavy sanding first, Pete. But really, that's all just dirt & spilled coffee & stuff. Hey, I'm a sloppy trailertrash workaholic bachelor and yeah, the floor is worn & cracked in very few places but it came with the house, was underneath wall to wall carpet - really! - and I like the pattern.

Found the type of brush strips I'll need to make the floor washer suck water. They came off an extra Compact floor tool. The brush strips on Tom's are densely packed together and about 1/4" apart. They are part of a rectangular plastic plate 11 5/8" long by 1 1/4" wide that is screwed into the nozzle allowing suction only through the long slit between the strips. Water simply drips down through the long center slit, and you 'scrub'. When its time to suck up, capillary effect 'seals' the brush strips with water as it is vacuumed up into the bag. The original nozzle comes off easily by turning it upside down and it slips off. I'll have to manufacture my own plate and fix the brushes to it like the original. Unless someone has this plate or a spare complete nozzle in a parts bin...someday...

The elbow from the machine connected to the nozzle sits a mere 1/2" above the floor. I found a orphaned unidentifiable gray plastic generic floor brush 11" wide that satisfies these parameters. All I need to do is clean all the accumulated dustbunnies out of the brushes (don't think it'll be necessary to create a long center slit as the water comes from the tank in a 1/4" rubber hose inside the large vacuum orifice) and reduce the inlet hole to fit and it'll work for the second machine.

Tom, I should have taken a photo of yours...could you shoot me a picture of the bottom of your floor washer nozzle?

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Inside the nozzles. From these pictures you can see what I'm trying to duplicate for the second Floorwasher.

Just need to get water to flow to the floor where the brushes will spread it out, then have close fitting brushes to form its own vacuum seal for waste water pickup. Brilliantly simple design really, even if it was Hoover's Edsel, as Tom says.

And oh, that sleek sexy pastel shape...swoon.

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Can anyone identify the Vacuum Brand of this sacrificial doner plastic flip-over floor tool? I have a matching rug tool as well. They are all gray plastic with a gray rubber bumper and a plastic swivel angled elbow.

All I'm going to do is fit a reducer tube & O-ring into it, so if the two tools are important to someone's needs the modifications are reversable.

Thank you. Dave.
 
Great finds and LOVE that Filtex !!

Hi Dave:

Great collection of finds. I especially love that Filtex you got. Just like you mentioned it looks brand new. I defiantly want to get one of those for my collection. I rarely see them and never with the hose, attachments or paperwork. You got a once in a lifetime deal there. I know you'll enjoy it. But now with winter coming on for us here in the northeast. Time to stay home, enjoy your finds and do some housework.
 
Thanks Paul, and believe me there's nothing much I'd rather do than stay home the next 6 vacation weeks and play with the new toys. A few of them need major spa treatments but mostly, after getting the rest of the collection off the floor and on to shelves, now I have to contend with this mighty pile of treasures. Yeah, like I am complaining. LOL.

One thing at a time. Last night re-rivited the handle support for the Kirby G3 and changed the paperbag. All 4 rivits were popped making for a very sloppy bouncing handle and they'd fallen inside the motor housing. Lucky I found them. I suspect the lady simply put the machine away when the handle fell off and the vacuum was making horrendous noises from the debris in the fan from her reno pickup. Anyone else find these rivits popping or loosening from rough handling? Easy to re-do. Took a small, just larger than the rivit, ball bearing, placed it in the rivit end that spreads and squeezed with vicegrips. it forces the ball bearing to evenly spread the rivit and you can finish it off flat. Gawd I LUV Powerdrive!!! The G3 was rescued just in time - found a heap of rattling nuts, bolts, screws, staples and plaster dust in the emptor & bag. Damn lucky the bag didn't get pierced. Removed a 1.5" nail punched through the plastic fan but at least all the vanes are intact. It runs real smooth and is quieter than I was expecting.

In a few days I leave for Winnipeg Manitoba for at least 2 weeks to assist a buddy put the player guts back into a totally rebuilt 1929 6.5' flame mahogany Steinway Duo-Art grand...and add a midi valve interface at the same time. Big job, big fun, dang cold. A trip to Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan to meet Doug Smith adds to the pending adventure quotient.

Today I'll tackle the Connie hoses, putting the correct ends on the flex hoses gifted from generous Tom. And keep fiddling up a Floor Washer nozzle brush arrangement; So close now, I see it all in my mind...after viewing that UTube video over and over.
 
Oh, and thanks, Piano God Scott for that Nilfisk ID. They are in real rough shape so I'll use it for the second Hoover just so I can see the dang clever machine work.

I must learn how to UTube soon.

Dave
 
Oh Happy PineSol Day! Memories of Mom's favorite floor c

Went to work on nozzle-less Washer #2. This is the really dirty scuffed one Tom threw in with the eBay one I won from him. What fun taking it all apart to see how it's made and check for and renew any leak points. Really, all it needed was rubber gaskets cleaned of waterlime deposits in the various valves. Washed each part to remove years of dust & dirt and of course the Magic Eraser final touch.

Then to work on the gray transplant floorbrush as I envisioned it last night. Patiently picked out every dust bunny fibre from the brushes forming a perfect thin wide footprint surrounded all around by dense brushage flat to the floor; a hot water soak straightened out the twisted ones. Looking more & more ideal for the purpose. Nozzle reducer connection was a snap, literally. Found a piece of thick walled rubber hose that clamped snug into the gray tool halves' hole without pulling out. The inside diameter of the hose is a match to the machine end - all I added was a punched hole for the lug - punched 3 to form a slot so the nozzle is free to rotate like the original. Voila, it's a secure push on fit. Amazed I didn't have to add any collar shims.

Broom-cleared a section of linoleum in front of the sink, no pre-scrubbing. Now understand that this is OLD scuffed flooring with some surface wear (black spots) through the pattern (Gold line grid on yellow/cream speckled background), probably put down in the 1930s in an 1894 house, so allowing for my floor's shabby well worn chic, the pictures show the clean. Nothing special other than adding PineSol to the tank water. The machine worked flawlessly. Dispenses wash water on demand and stops when you release the trigger, the brush spreads it out as you scrub. You could turn the motor off while scrubbing but why bother? The motor has a soothing hum to it and you want it warmed up for the next step. Warm exhaust air directed at the nozzle from the bottom of the motor casing blowdries the floor at the same time the machine is sucking up dirty water in one pass. And NO STREAKS!!!

Frankly, I could have done the same job on my hands and knees with attendant backache like Mom, in small sections as far as my arm would reach but it would have taken considerably longer, would have left streaks to be gone over with a mop, wouldn't have done any better a job and certainly wouldn't have been as much fun. Standing and working with the Hoover Model 3500 Floor Washer lets you clean 6 foot deep areas as wide as you like without stepping on wet floor. Why, my jean's knees aren't even wet! Gotta love this convenient sexy machine.

Wash the rest of the Kitchen floor tomorrow or tonight and Tomorrow - We Wax & Buff! Mmm, continue with Hoover or give the red wine Electrolux Model BX10 with wax solution tank a run?

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Well it's certainly looking better Gonna have to find some stiffer brushes though for that red Electrolux scrubber..I think those brushes are a bit too soft
 

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