vintagehoover
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2006
- Messages
- 2,883
Hi Charles Richard -
the lower motor vents you mention seem to appear exclusively on 240v machines - my guess would be that Hoover engineers were concerned about keeping the new 360w motor cool when running on a higher current. The same lower vents were also used on the 825; later 825s had slightly restyled vents, as did the 875 (the final cleaner of this style before the Dreyfuss-designed 262 was introduced).
The 800 and 825 were the first Hoover cleaners to be 'styled', Hoover taking their inspiration from luxury motor cars of the day - so you could be right with 'heavy industrial'. They make the cleaner look like it means business!
A few friends in the US who have 800s have commented that UK 800s sound slightly 'different', but not louder, exactly. I've noticed the wattages between the US and UK 800s vary slightly, too - and presumably, the RPM's - which could be a factor.
the lower motor vents you mention seem to appear exclusively on 240v machines - my guess would be that Hoover engineers were concerned about keeping the new 360w motor cool when running on a higher current. The same lower vents were also used on the 825; later 825s had slightly restyled vents, as did the 875 (the final cleaner of this style before the Dreyfuss-designed 262 was introduced).
The 800 and 825 were the first Hoover cleaners to be 'styled', Hoover taking their inspiration from luxury motor cars of the day - so you could be right with 'heavy industrial'. They make the cleaner look like it means business!
A few friends in the US who have 800s have commented that UK 800s sound slightly 'different', but not louder, exactly. I've noticed the wattages between the US and UK 800s vary slightly, too - and presumably, the RPM's - which could be a factor.