Hoover Commercial Porta Power

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vacosaurus

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2013
Messages
61
Location
Cleveland ohio
Hello, I recently aquired a Hoover orange and raisin brown commercial porta power vacuum model S 7065 - 060 and serial # 049500177894 with 7.4 amp motor including attachments. It is in mint original condition looks to have been used only a few times. I have a few questions about it as I have never owned one of these ( only collected convertables ). 1st could someone give me a date of manufacture? 2nd it has a reuseable bag in it I did some research on the internet and I see Hoover made a adapter to use a disposable " N " bag in place of the shake out bag. Could anyone tell me what would be better to use on a daily basis shake out bag or disposable? Is there any mechanical maintenance I should perform on it IE. lubrication. As I said it is perfect shape and runs well are the motor bearings the lubed for life style or does it need periodic oiling? Seems to be a well built machine. When did they stop making them ? My wife is already eyeballing it. Any and all information will be greatly appreciated. Thanks Bill
 
They still make these in a commercial model......

I had the model you are talking about. I got it brand new and when they came out it only had the shake out bag system. Hoover makes an adapter kit for their commercial to convert to paper bag inside the cloth bag. If my time frame is correct the brown and orange model was sometime in the 70's.

You can still buy cloth bags for these machines when they get worn or you could use the paper bag conversion.

I had this and a Eureka Mighty Mite, during the 70's. Mighty Mite was paper only during that time, but you can buy a shake out bag for them now.

Hoover has not changed much from their original design over the years but the Eureka Mighty Mite has been cheapened over the years. Bag latch on door more flimsy, attachments cheaply made compared to the original ones. The mighty mite does make a model with a hepa filter now.



PR-21
 
Your PortaPower was manufactured in April of 1995, based on the first four digits of your serial number. Hoover went to the orange cleaners sometime in the mid-late 80s, I believe (to distinguish it as a commercial machine), even though the only difference was the color and the heavier cord.

I've used both the dump-out bag and the paper bag adapter on my PortaPowers and Singettes. As much as I like the idea of the paper bag, I actually prefer the dump-out bag over the paper bag. Changing the tiny paper bag is more trouble than I think it's worth. The cloth bag is fairly easy to dump out, and every few times I empty it, I turn it inside out and give it a good shake, or vacuum it off with another machine.

Those are great little workhorses, and if you think about it, Hoover has been making the same basic machine since the Swingette came out in the late 60s. It's always been a popular machine, even when it was discontinued from the domestic product line, they still sold very well to commercial accounts (lots of cleaning companies).

Congrats on a nice little find!
 
Fred, what on earth is a Singette? I only know of the SWINGETTE and the Porta-Power! Glad I caught that typo before John did!!!! 
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Only 50 times...I would have loved that...we usually got 500 times & we couldn't start until we got home!

Because I did... 😋
 
Thanks for the informative replies. The little vac found a good home. I think I will stick with the cloth bag. How long does a cloth bag usually last in daily use conditions? Are the cloth bags still manufactured or have they been discontinued? Would it be advisable to pick up a couple of spare bags or not to worry about it yet? Also again the lubrication question vacuum is almost 20 years old and runs and sounds very good. Should I leave well enough alone and just use it? Just want to know so I can maintain it properly. Thanks again Bill,
 
Yes I think I will pick up a new Hoover cloth bag for it. I have a lot of vintage items that I like and want to keep and have learned over the years to buy NOS or reproduction replacement parts for the wear items or things that naturally deteriorate with age. Bill,
 

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