First Electrolux

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JHGVac

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 23, 2011
Messages
55
I picked up my first Electrolux today, a turquoise Model L.

It has the belt winder but no power nozzle. It has a fair number of scuffs, but no major dents. Fairly clean as well, the pictures are before any clean up.

jhgvac++12-17-2011-14-47-10.jpg
 
I think the wands are not original. They seem to light weight and flimsy compared to everything else on the vacuum.

jhgvac++12-17-2011-15-01-56.jpg
 
Those wands are actually original. That is one thing that I like about the older Electrolux wands, they are very lightweight! That is an awesome find though!
 
Excuse me, "too light weight."

Any cleaning tips? So far my only experience is with Kirby vacuums, which have little painted/enameled surface.

Joe
 
@ vacman117

Oh, that's good to know. They don't have any markings on them either. I'm glad I didn't leave them behind now.

Thanks Chase!

Joe
 
Awesome Electrolux!It looks to be in nice shape!I have one Electrolux myself and they are terrific Vacs.I'm sure glad you were able to save it.It is a really well preserved machine and I love the styling they had on the model L to me it has a classy look to it and I heard that the Model L was one great vac to own in it's day.Awesome!
 
I wanted to add that the minor scratches come out great with soft scrub or a light rubbing compound.If you lightly use soft scrub and a little windex followed by a little car wax the finish should turn out beautiful.Also a light rubbing compound followed by a damp rag then some hand buffing should take the marks off of the plastic as well as the paint.Just don't rub to hard on the painted surface as you want to apply it lightly but buff clean after a rinse with a damp rag.I've always had very good success with those cleaning tips
 
That and toothpaste works well on the rubber as well just be sure to rinse it off wiping it with a damp rag afterwards.Great find,I'd be proud of that one if it were mine.
 
@ tyson

Thanks for the tips Tyson!

I am pleased, the thing runs like a top and makes a pleasant whooshing sound.

Joe
 
Joe:

Your Model L would have been made sometime between 1968 and 1973; these were the years that the L was finished to match the TOL Model 1205. I have one in storage that's identical to yours.

You did very well for $12! The fact that the wands, the combination floor/rug tool and the crevice tool are present is a huge plus. You lack only the combination dusting brush/upholstery tool to have your machine complete.

Turquoise dusting brushes in good shape are getting a little hard to find. There is a soft rubber part inside the brush that tends to crack and tear over time. If you find a dusting brush with this problem, there is a fix: SuperGlue. It bonds rubber perfectly.

If you want a power nozzle for your machine, the correct ones for that vintage Model L are the PN-1 in turquoise, or the PN-2, which was a polished aluminum unit. Early Ls used a non-electric hose, with a separate cord that was clipped to the hose with turquoise plastic clips. You can still buy the cord easily on that auction site, but the clips are unobtainium new; your only chance at them is used. You can also use Rainbow hose cord straps (which come in black only). Late Ls used an electrified hose with a "pigtail" on it to plug into the power nozzle port. The 1974 gold L I just found uses that arrangement.

If you want to put a PURDY shine on your L, I recommend TR-3 Resin Glaze, a car polish/sealant available in auto parts stores. You will end up with a blinding shine on that beautiful turquoise paint.

Another thing - all the brush bristles on your tools are replaceable. That auction site is one good place to look for them if you ever need them. Even the dusting brush's bristles just pull out (they're mounted in a metal strip) and a new set snaps in. Also, that cordwinder is rebuildable if it ever gets lazy about rewinding the cord. You will improve the rewind a lot if you will make sure the cord is clean and then dust it with a little talcum powder; that was Electrolux's recommended lubricant for the cord.

Great machine! You're lucky.
 
Thanks Sandy!

Wow, lots of good info there.

Was the power nozzle an option on the Model L? Based on the amount of stuff the owner of the house hung on to, it seems like it should have been there had they ever been in possession of it.

Also, the little receptacle for the PN has a rubber cover that plugs in, and it's still nice and tight with good insertion force as if it seldom has been opened. So I suspect this one has never been used with a power nozzle.

Joe
 
Joe:

Yes, the power nozzle was an option. It cost around $69.50 extra by the time the PN-2 was introduced.

You could buy the PN with the machine, in which case your Lux was called a Deluxe model, as in Deluxe Model L. Or - you could buy it later, in which case your machine was just called a Model L on the sales order.

Electrolux salesmen used the PN both as a way to upgrade the sale and to save it if the customer was hesitating. If the customer would go for the PN, well and good. But if they balked at the total price, then the salesman could say, "Well, the machine itself is only XXXX amount without the power nozzle - and you can always add the power nozzle later if you decide you really need it." This made the customer feel like they had some control over what they were spending.

Also, in the '60s and '70s, power nozzles weren't yet the standard feature they are now. A lot of people did not have carpet at all, just throw rugs, so they didn't really benefit from a PN. The family you bought that machine from might have been in that category at the time they purchased it.
 
Danemodsandy, you just confirmed something i said several yrs ago on this forum and was balked at. Someone asked what the "Deluxe" means on several Models of Lux's made after 1959, 60.
I wrote that i was told by an old Electrolux salesman once that the "Deluxe" infront of ANY model Electrolux just means WITH POWER NOZZLE.
You just confirmed that,,thank you! lol

I also asked this old salesman about my Grandma's Model E. once.
She had a standard model E that she bought back in the late 1950s,,the one with the chrome cord halo on the back,,but no automatic control. You just changed the bag whenever the suction got too low.
Anyway, in around 1966 Grandma had wall to wall carpet installed. And about that time, the Electrolux man came calling.
She didnt have the money for a new Model G with PN, so right there in her living room, the salesman performed some surgery on her Model E and made a PN port to the side of the front wheel, just like a model G. Put the blue cord and cord straps around her Model E hose,,and sold her a PN1,,,she loved it,,and that Model E lasted that way until the late 1980s when i brought her a new Electrolux Silverado,,that she is still using.
Anyway, i asked the old Lux Salesman that since her Model E was now equipped with a PN,,would you call it a "Deluxe" Model E. He laughed and said YES!! DEFINATLY!
 
Brian:

That was the beauty of the power nozzle - you could add it to a new cleaner sale, you could take it off to save a sale, you could add it back to the sale later to increase it, or you could add a PN to an old machine to get a sale out of someone who would not have bought a new machine. Electrolux was very smart about that kind of thing. VERY smart.

They did the same thing with the turbo polisher, though that was never as popular as a PN. My first Electrolux was a factory-reconditioned L in hammertone blue, with a PN-1. They made good and darned sure that I sat through the WHOLE presentation on the turbo polisher.

To help you understand what an effective and efficient sales organization they were, I went in looking at stuff I could not possibly afford in 1972, when I worked a couple of doors down from Electrolux's Atlanta showroom on Piedmont Avenue. I wanted a 1205 REAL bad; they had just come out with the PN-2, and the sight of all that turquoise-and-aluminum goodness gleaming in the show window was driving me nuts. I also wanted a B-8 shampooer-polisher, because I'd used one belonging to a friend and loved it.

The catch was, I was on my first real job, didn't have any credit to speak of, and the 1205 and B-8 would have been something like $500-600 total. Well, they let me down gently - they told me what they COULD do for me, and I left with the L - though I declined the turbo polisher as not being close enough to what I wanted. I got regular postcards from the agency after that, advising me of new models and sales on bags and tune-ups.

All gone now, and Aerus ain't the same.
 
A Little Perspective....

If Atlanta's Electrolux agency had let me finance $500 worth of new equipment back in 1972, it would have been equal to more than $2500 today. I was asking for a lot, LOL.

The refurbished Model L was around $140, if memory serves, which would have been equal to more than $700 now.

Back then, consumer durables were DURABLE. Considering what they cost, they needed to be - you didn't want to buy a new vac every couple of years at those prices.
 
'flimsy' wands

These are a quality original wand set.But they may need a trick I learned as a sales rep.If wands fall apart hold one in each hand in T shape then roll the solid part of one wand over the slotted part of the other.On carpeted floor is good.The even pressure will tighten them as new.
 
B8 Floor Polisher/Carpet Beautifier

I don't remember how much my parents paid for it back in 1970? Also at the same time as the 1205 & Rug Washer. My guess was about $200?

floor-a-matic++12-19-2011-21-37-49.jpg
 

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