Hoover Decade 80 Hot Belt

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Okay this is what my vacuum man told me, the new oem hoover belts are made a bit smaller then years ago with a stronger rubber compound thus it being hard to stretch over the shaft if you can get it over it & once on the roll rush would barely spin & the motor was struggling to turn. He has had many complaints from customers with old machines burning up motors so he started using eureka belts which solved the problem. You might want to try this to see if this fixes it, if not try rebuilding the old brush roll, they will last better then the new plastic ones. Hope this helps. Cheers!! Mark D.
 
I also disagree that the CWP brushrolls are crap. I think they work very well on particular machines; in the end, it's certainly nice to see something modern available for a machine that hasn't been in domestic production in nearly 23 years.


 


I would not use a CWP brushroll in ANY Convertible earlier than the High-Performance models from the mid 70s. The earlier Convertibles don't have the amperage/wattage and motor speed to get the CWP brushrolls moving fast enough to not get bogged down.  For this same reason, I am also careful to not use any genuine brushrolls or replacement brush strips comprised of white or red bristles - as they are stiffer than the black bristles.  The new, stiffer bristles were introduced when the high-performance machines came out. 


 


Any of the High Performance metal-base machines, or plastic base machines from the mid-70s onward would be an ideal candidate for a CWP brushroll, in my opinion. But again, I would never recommend or even think about putting a CWP brushroll in any Convertible from the 50s, 60s, or early 70s - unless you install a later motor in an earlier machine*. 


 


*I did this recently, having gotten the "formula" from Jeff Parker many years ago, I took parts from both a mid-60s Convertible (model 584), and a Decade 80, and created a souped-up Convertible.  It made sense to combine some of the motor parts, and took a bit of rewiring to get it right.  It works amazingly well, and the CWP brushroll holds it's own.  I picked up the machine at an estate sale and it sat in the garage for a while.  When I found a Decade 80 to part-out, I realized that the 584 was a diamond in the rough, under a layer of filth, so I got to work...   Here's a picture of my monster. 
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