another lux

VacuumLand – Vintage & Modern Vacuum Enthusiasts

Help Support VacuumLand:

Me too!

I don't have a hose for mine either. Got everythinng else though....A hose just might be something I'll never get my hands on...
 
Lux hoses

are on eBay all the time. No, not original LX hoses -- good luck ever finding one of those worth using -- but you can find genuine Electrolux replacement hoses.

The 1205 / turquoise L hose looks really nice with the LX, especially if you can find the version with the all-metal handle end.
 
LX a keeper?

After reviewing the foregoing comments, should I be offering up my LX instead of cannibilize it? The design does not "speak to me" as far as "assemblage sculpture" ideas like some other vacs - maybe an open wheel racer - so it has been sitting on the shelf. Thoughts?
 
it is a grate vacuum

and it is hard to find in good shape go for the model g e and xxx thare a dime a dosen
 
Mr. Rocketwarrior

I was trying to come up with a suggestion as to what you could do with your LX... The unit as a whole is a good looking machine. But stripped of it's trim pieces, the superstructure only represents stationary. The body looks to me like the boiler and firebox of a steam engine. But not in the locomotive idea, as in your model E train. More like a power plant engine. Inverted, maybe a building, here again stationary... Perhaps it could only be a part of something much larger. It just does not suggest movement to me...Sorry, I guess I was no help!
 
The Box.............

It would have come in a box like this. That's the original hose too. The tools are in the box for this picture.

This was my Grandma's vacuum bought new in the early 50's.

Joe

4-3-2007-11-04-53--Buffalo-Joe.jpg
 
Rocketwarrior and Joe:

RW,

The hose in the top of your pic is from a turquoise Model G, and the one in the bottom is from the dark turquoise Model L. (The same color and pattern of hose was used with the 1205, but it did not have this type of curved metal handle.)

Attached is a close-up of a swatch of fabric from a Model LX hose. This is as close to the original color, hue and intensity as you will find: This sample came from inside the machine-end coupler where it had been protected from light throughout the years. It was a hose that was crummy, old and faded. I wanted to save the ends from it.

When I pulled the machine-end coupler off and saw the color of the hose that had been inside it, it really amazed me! It was the first time since I was a kid that I had seen a cloth LX/E hose with such intensity in its colors. Because the material was cloth, it fades over the years. Most of the ones you find nowadays are faded to a bland beige sort of color, with the color of the background and the color of the decorative pattern barely indistinguishable from one another.

When the LX/E hoses were new, they created an odd optical illusion: The background color was dark, almost a charcoal gray, and the chevron-shaped pattern was a bright, intense blue. So, when you would stare at the hose for a while without blinking, the blue pattern would begin to appear to be floating above the gray background!

I doubt the same effect will obtain with this photo, but try it and see!

---

Joe,

That's a BEAUTIFUL box from the LX! I have one that's not in quite as nice condition but it is all intact.

I have to say, Electrolux really went all out when this new Model LX was introduced in 1952. Every thing about it was deluxe -- the styling, the many attachments available, even the packaging and of course the fabulous instruction booklet!

I don't know of any other manufacturer who ever put out a 40-page full-color instruction manual! And even more unbelievably, the LX manual hasn't just got color photos, but color watercolor paintings that an artist had to very laboriously create! (No scanners or Photoshop back in those days!)

To those with backgrounds in printing and graphic art, it boggles the mind to consider the cost and technical difficulties involved in producing such a manual in the early 1950s! Truly amazing!!

4-3-2007-13-43-42--charles~richard.jpg
 

Latest posts

Back
Top