wyaple
Well-known member
I recently acquired a female purebred boxer puppy and dedicated my 1987 Heritage II Legend to clean the family room carpet (on the first floor) where she spends most of her time. I also have a G4 on the second floor that cleans nearly double the square footage of the same carpet. After one month, the HEPA bag in the G4 smelled quite normal, but the exact same HEPA bag in the H2L was stinking up a storm so much that even my wife noticed it within 20 seconds of beginning to vacuum.
The problem is that our house is so clean that in one month the bags in both machines were only ¼ full. So, I decided that if I was going to throw out the HEPA bag in the H2L, I might as well see what’s in it. I had a hard time believing that a 3 month old short-haired, relatively clean puppy could affect the dirt quality so much. But, the last few days before I decided to see “what’s in the bag”, I tried several things to eliminate the odor. Below is the order of events. Note: attempted to get charcoal, but the only charcoal I could find had lighter fluid in it. Not trying that!
1) Kirby scent tabs (covered some of the smell, but definitely didn’t deodorize)
2) Dryer sheet (not bad, but the mustiness eventually won out)
3) Washed Outer Permanent Bag (helped for a day only)
4) Sprayed special dog deodorizer (mostly baking soda, alcohol, etc.) inside the bag
So I then turned the bag inside out and saw what I thought was typical dirt. Nothing but fine dust, minimal brown dog hair and carpet fluff was lightly packed in there. It smelled moderately musty though. I removed the dirt and blew out all the fine dust (reminded me of my old bag less Dirt Devil days) and let the inside out bag air out in the direct sunlight for a few hours. Well, the smell partially subsided. After spraying the aforementioned dog deodorizer on it and waiting another few hours, the smell was totally eradicated!
My last test was to determine if any pores were blocked. Using the trusty (and inexpensive) Baird air flow meter, I compared the airflow of my “frankenbag” to a new HEPA bag. Guess what? The both pulled an 8.5 at the end of the hose. No suction loss, no clogged pores as far as I’m concerned. Feel free to disagree (but tell me why). This result completely goes against a Youtube video in which a Rainbow salesman claims all the pores in bagged machines clog up in about 3-5 minutes.
Look around the 7 minute mark.
Bill
The problem is that our house is so clean that in one month the bags in both machines were only ¼ full. So, I decided that if I was going to throw out the HEPA bag in the H2L, I might as well see what’s in it. I had a hard time believing that a 3 month old short-haired, relatively clean puppy could affect the dirt quality so much. But, the last few days before I decided to see “what’s in the bag”, I tried several things to eliminate the odor. Below is the order of events. Note: attempted to get charcoal, but the only charcoal I could find had lighter fluid in it. Not trying that!
1) Kirby scent tabs (covered some of the smell, but definitely didn’t deodorize)
2) Dryer sheet (not bad, but the mustiness eventually won out)
3) Washed Outer Permanent Bag (helped for a day only)
4) Sprayed special dog deodorizer (mostly baking soda, alcohol, etc.) inside the bag
So I then turned the bag inside out and saw what I thought was typical dirt. Nothing but fine dust, minimal brown dog hair and carpet fluff was lightly packed in there. It smelled moderately musty though. I removed the dirt and blew out all the fine dust (reminded me of my old bag less Dirt Devil days) and let the inside out bag air out in the direct sunlight for a few hours. Well, the smell partially subsided. After spraying the aforementioned dog deodorizer on it and waiting another few hours, the smell was totally eradicated!
My last test was to determine if any pores were blocked. Using the trusty (and inexpensive) Baird air flow meter, I compared the airflow of my “frankenbag” to a new HEPA bag. Guess what? The both pulled an 8.5 at the end of the hose. No suction loss, no clogged pores as far as I’m concerned. Feel free to disagree (but tell me why). This result completely goes against a Youtube video in which a Rainbow salesman claims all the pores in bagged machines clog up in about 3-5 minutes.
Look around the 7 minute mark.
Bill