vintagefox
Well-known member
Looks like I have twins now! Referring to the vacuum kind of course!
This took quite awhile to finish up. My drill/buffer bit the dust and I had to hand polish this one for a good 4 hours. The standard terry cloth and Mother's polish didn't cut it so I had to use fine grade 000 steel wool with the polish. And the results well turned out better, as it left a mirror finish. Also this machine had much less scratches than my first 700 does so it came out much shiner.
Bearings were regreased. (Motor spun pretty well and had no play, grease seemed fine so I just packed them full) brushroll was gone through and cleaned, new belt, washed the bag, handle and base plug were wired in and installed.
Its usable as is but it still needs some small things. Such as a belt cover (currently borrowing the one off a 725 at the moment), make new motor brushes,and I'm thinking about installing a bumper on this one (as well as on my other 700).
I sewed the bottom of the bag but I lined the inside with a paper C bag, just to make emptying the bag a tad more easier.
I'm quite pleased with how it came out, and I'm pretty certain I lost a pound or two in the process.
What surprises me the most is how little this machine was used. The commutator had almost no wear and entire inside of the motor was exceptionally clean.
And this machine, judging by the serial number was manufactured a little earlier than my first model 700.
My first 700 being: 7382800
and the second 700 being: 7375356
-Alex





This took quite awhile to finish up. My drill/buffer bit the dust and I had to hand polish this one for a good 4 hours. The standard terry cloth and Mother's polish didn't cut it so I had to use fine grade 000 steel wool with the polish. And the results well turned out better, as it left a mirror finish. Also this machine had much less scratches than my first 700 does so it came out much shiner.
Bearings were regreased. (Motor spun pretty well and had no play, grease seemed fine so I just packed them full) brushroll was gone through and cleaned, new belt, washed the bag, handle and base plug were wired in and installed.
Its usable as is but it still needs some small things. Such as a belt cover (currently borrowing the one off a 725 at the moment), make new motor brushes,and I'm thinking about installing a bumper on this one (as well as on my other 700).
I sewed the bottom of the bag but I lined the inside with a paper C bag, just to make emptying the bag a tad more easier.
I'm quite pleased with how it came out, and I'm pretty certain I lost a pound or two in the process.
What surprises me the most is how little this machine was used. The commutator had almost no wear and entire inside of the motor was exceptionally clean.
And this machine, judging by the serial number was manufactured a little earlier than my first model 700.
My first 700 being: 7382800
and the second 700 being: 7375356
-Alex




