Dave and Petes March micro-meet

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Fantom Fury redeems itself in my sceptacle eyes...

Oh, I'm not about to start collecting them but after putting this Fury back together after stripping it down to the motor and washing everything clean it runs - loudly - and pulls a respectable 51" through the hose inlet (before the combination hose/wand is connected.

If you know this type of vacuum you know the suction is through the hose (inside of which is a two piece collapsing aluminum wand) when in the handle-up lock position. As the handle is lowered for floor use the suction is redirected to the brushroll and the hose is cut off.

The brushroll is wood with shaft bearings and the roll had swelled and dried in an oval shape, binding it to the brush supports and dividers. The bearings were wobbly loose in the wood cutout, which has a bumpy ring liner to seat the bearing. So I filled in the spaces with 5 minute epoxy, inserted the ring against it. Once just set I hammered the bearings home and left it overnight. All centered and fixed. This took up the slack in the belt which had burned through some of the surrounding plastic channel. It spins so fast I wouldn't use this vac on a polyester carpet...but then I wouldn't have a plastic carpet in the house anyway. LOL Clearly you want to empty the bin and central dust tube thoroughly after each use or the fine dust will cake up into a hard lump.

The headlight is certainly stylish but the illumination of the the floor is virtually useless. Anyway, it's a narrow path heavy cumbersome noisy vacuum cleaner that is not very maneuverable. But it does pick up dirt quite well and has interesting compact looks. Frankly I'd rather use the Hoover Dam to do the same thing better and funner. I like the collapsing wands inside the expanding hose but really, Hoover did it better...and funner. :-)

Was the FURY the first itteration of J Dyson's ideas for Fantom?

There is something to be said for vortex bagless vacuums with multiple chambers for different sized debris. I was surprised at all the microfine dust it picked up from a few passes over the hallway carpet - about an 8 feet long path. Along with all the lovely cat hair in the bin.

I'll go over all the carpets in the house just to see what it picks up then set it aside on display.

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from the back, everything on board. Manual that I downloaded recommends changing the big side HEPA filter every 2 years.

This same machines with a removable swirl cone is now made for Westinghouse as is the Fantom Cyclone XT.

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Meanwhile, back in Kenmore Touch-O-Matic Land

The shellac scraped off easily and i used dental tools around the gold stamped lettering. A first stain of golden oak brings out the grain nicely. Since this pic I have touched up the letters with old gold paint and gave it an overall honey oak stain. Plan is to protect it all under severeal coats of rubbed out shellac till I achieve a piano finish..ie, french polishing.

I recognized the smell of shellac as it scraped off. Also, the chrome bits are not chrome at all. It's all nickel plated steel.

I believe the use of shellac & nickle date this sweeper prior to WW2. As does the styling.

And so it goes...

Dave

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Hey Dave I have a fury and cyclone XT they work great and they pick up soo much I hope u enjoy the fantom. although I wonder why urs is so loud mine is pretty quiet could it be the bearings??
Mike
 
Fantastic job on the Kenmore carpet sweeper. Oddly they don't seem to garner much interest from anyone be it vac collectors or antique collectors or anyone. I've had a couple of nice Bissell wood ones and given them away. Kept the wooden Pneu-Vac though which you've seen. How its remained in such pristine condition for nearly 100 years is amazing.
 
Continuing this Kenmore Carpet Sweeper theme...

Lettering restored, nicks and nail holes filled, several; 2 layers of shellac to set the color and finally paste & liquid wax - many layers.

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The newly contrived Lux-O-Lewyt polisher

The Lewyt 120 has become the vacuum of choice for the crowded kitchen workspace as it has a small footprint, pumps out lots of inches and is easily booted...er...nudged out of the way on those spin-on-s-dime wheels.

Yup, that's the Hammertone blue Turb-o-tool with the drill chuck and a lambswool polishing pad.

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A sleek reinterpretation of the humble Carpet Sweeper returned from the Land of Forgotten...

Joining his older sibling from Grand Rapids, Sister Bissell. Under the skin the exact same mechanism.

The late 1930s/pre WWII Kenmore Touch-O-Matic.

Thankfully (?) I have only 2 carpet sweepers so I'm not collecting them...yet. Get 3 of something and yer collectin', Mister!

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I'll close this thread with something turquoise I've been searching for for a long time, the Interactive James P Sullivan aka Sully that goes with the interactive Mike. They were sold as sets. Hard plastic Green one-eyed Mikes are a dime a dozen at thrift stores but I've never found a Sully til now. He's a plush cuddly one and no doubt stays in the toybox.

Both have rather impressive animatronic faces with moving mouths, rolling and blinking eyes and touch sensors. Start one up, the other comes to life and they'll have a cogent back and forth conversation for 10 minutes, accompanied with waving arms from Mike. Sully's head turns to wherever Mike is.

Based in Markham Ontario Canada, Thinkway Toys are the folks who developed the circuitry and are responsible for all the Disney Interactive toys from Monsters Inc in 2001 and Toy Story 1,2&3.

Pete can tell ya, I spend as much time in Value Village Toy sections as I do in Appliances. LOL

Dave

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Wow, great job on the Kenmore carpet sweeper, it's beautiful.

I really like the deco style of the wrap around bumper.

Love the Lux-O-Lewyt polisher set up!
 
The Kenmore really captures debris well!

As does the Bissel. I tossed sawdust on the carpet and both of them swept up a clean path in one pass.

Touch-O-Matic is a sly bit of Streamline Moderne Age Marketing smooze. Sure, as soon as you touch it and send it across the carpet it does set in motion a whirling brush with an upper comb that spits the dirt into the two bins...but heck, that's what all carpet sweepers ever did. :-)

But it sure does look classy.

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