minivanmegafun
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2011
- Messages
- 113
Hi folks, first post here.
I just inherited my grandmother's Diamond Jubilee; and with it the typical pile of accessories accumulated from Luxes past and present: PN5, combination rug/floor tool, a couple upholstery/dusting attachments, older cast aluminum wall/floor tool, sprayer, a vaporizer; and about 50 Genuine Electrolux bags. The only uncommon thing is an Electrolux-branded extension cord, but I'm not about to complain about not finding anything particularly interesting.
My significant other has been complaining that it doesn't have quite the suction of the Hoover Tempo Widepath I'd like to have it replace (cheap uprights are terrible for hard-surface floors), so I dragged it to Avalon Vacuum in Lakeview, Chicago, hoping for a tune-up; and I feared the cloth hose might be leaking.
The guy at Avalon grabbed his vacuum gauge, and measured about 60 inches of water at both the canister and the hose. No leak in the cloth hose (yay!), but the pull is a bit weak. He said that there wasn't much to do other than replace the motor, and at its age, it's probably not worth it.
I've worked on my car plenty, how hard can an Electrolux be? And for that matter, where do I find a new motor?
Thanks!

I just inherited my grandmother's Diamond Jubilee; and with it the typical pile of accessories accumulated from Luxes past and present: PN5, combination rug/floor tool, a couple upholstery/dusting attachments, older cast aluminum wall/floor tool, sprayer, a vaporizer; and about 50 Genuine Electrolux bags. The only uncommon thing is an Electrolux-branded extension cord, but I'm not about to complain about not finding anything particularly interesting.

My significant other has been complaining that it doesn't have quite the suction of the Hoover Tempo Widepath I'd like to have it replace (cheap uprights are terrible for hard-surface floors), so I dragged it to Avalon Vacuum in Lakeview, Chicago, hoping for a tune-up; and I feared the cloth hose might be leaking.
The guy at Avalon grabbed his vacuum gauge, and measured about 60 inches of water at both the canister and the hose. No leak in the cloth hose (yay!), but the pull is a bit weak. He said that there wasn't much to do other than replace the motor, and at its age, it's probably not worth it.
I've worked on my car plenty, how hard can an Electrolux be? And for that matter, where do I find a new motor?
Thanks!
