rowdy141
Well-known member
I think we could probably improve airflow on cloth-bagged vacuums which have inner paper bags, by leaving the zipper slightly ajar.
I bought a new replacement Outer Bag for my Kirby Tradition.
Its not as well made or nicely finished, as earlier bags; no Kirby label, Bag Topper too deep, raw white fabric edges alongside zip, internal strap is velcro & too long, and there's no felt strip inside to protect from catching the paper bag and to seal the zipper area from dust.
The original need for this Felt Strip, and the absence of it on the new cloth bag, led me to question it:
The original purpose of the cloth bag was obviously to keep fine dust contained within the fabric. It had to be the right strength, the right weave, and it was important to empty it frequently, and to scrape stubborn crusty bits, to maintain proper airflow.
Otherwise, air pressure would build up inside the cloth bag, and resist the flow of new air coming in. The degree of pressure is evident in the way dirt is compacted into a near-solid brick if unemptied for too long.
Now that we have paper bags (double-ply, hepa filtration etc.) the purpose of the cloth bag today is just to serve as a container, like a net, to stop the paper bag from bursting.
It doesn't need to filter or resist airflow at all - but it was designed to!
I'm suggesting the degree of resistance, and restriction of airflow, caused by the outer cloth bag, is now hindering performance of the inner paper bag.
You can see the pressure build-up within the cloth bag, when it instantaneously inflates to a solid, as soon as you turn the machine on. This isn't purely because the paper bag is pushing from the inside, sometimes paper bags are folded-over at one end and never fully inflate, or the fill-tube impedes the paper bag, yet the cloth is always fully inflated in all areas, and solid.
It appears to me that there must be air pressure caused by the cloth bag, acting against the paper bag, restricting airflow.
I think the faster the (clean) air is allowed to escape the cloth bag, the easier it will be for new (dirty) air to enter the paper bag.
Modern upright vacuums with plastic housings and paper bags, all have significant air-vents in the plastic housing to allow air to escape as quickly as possible once its left the paper bag.
I tried leaving the cloth bag zipper slightly ajar, zipper undone an inch or two, and it seemed to improve performance.
I have no way to measure air-flow, pressure, vacuum etc.
So I cannot tell whether this is really a significant improvement or just my imagination.
I'd welcome your thoughts on this.
I bought a new replacement Outer Bag for my Kirby Tradition.
Its not as well made or nicely finished, as earlier bags; no Kirby label, Bag Topper too deep, raw white fabric edges alongside zip, internal strap is velcro & too long, and there's no felt strip inside to protect from catching the paper bag and to seal the zipper area from dust.
The original need for this Felt Strip, and the absence of it on the new cloth bag, led me to question it:
The original purpose of the cloth bag was obviously to keep fine dust contained within the fabric. It had to be the right strength, the right weave, and it was important to empty it frequently, and to scrape stubborn crusty bits, to maintain proper airflow.
Otherwise, air pressure would build up inside the cloth bag, and resist the flow of new air coming in. The degree of pressure is evident in the way dirt is compacted into a near-solid brick if unemptied for too long.
Now that we have paper bags (double-ply, hepa filtration etc.) the purpose of the cloth bag today is just to serve as a container, like a net, to stop the paper bag from bursting.
It doesn't need to filter or resist airflow at all - but it was designed to!
I'm suggesting the degree of resistance, and restriction of airflow, caused by the outer cloth bag, is now hindering performance of the inner paper bag.
You can see the pressure build-up within the cloth bag, when it instantaneously inflates to a solid, as soon as you turn the machine on. This isn't purely because the paper bag is pushing from the inside, sometimes paper bags are folded-over at one end and never fully inflate, or the fill-tube impedes the paper bag, yet the cloth is always fully inflated in all areas, and solid.
It appears to me that there must be air pressure caused by the cloth bag, acting against the paper bag, restricting airflow.
I think the faster the (clean) air is allowed to escape the cloth bag, the easier it will be for new (dirty) air to enter the paper bag.
Modern upright vacuums with plastic housings and paper bags, all have significant air-vents in the plastic housing to allow air to escape as quickly as possible once its left the paper bag.
I tried leaving the cloth bag zipper slightly ajar, zipper undone an inch or two, and it seemed to improve performance.
I have no way to measure air-flow, pressure, vacuum etc.
So I cannot tell whether this is really a significant improvement or just my imagination.
I'd welcome your thoughts on this.