huskyvacs
Well-known member
I had this thought after viewing Ian1035nr's topic about his Kirby motor armature that he showed has had a gouge worn into it. Has anyone ever wondered, what if from the first vacuum cleaners it became required for manufacturers to put a little usage hour counter on them? Like what some generators and construction equipment have, it can be used to see how many hours the vacuum has been run for and how much time has been put on the motor.
When the motor burns out, a vacuum shop could then write the old odometer readout and the service date onto the bottom of the vacuum body with a permanent paint marker and then reset the counter, and then you can also know how many hours have been put on the vacuum as a whole and the new motor.
It was just a thought I had that I thought would be great to also make it a lot easier to haggle on used vacuum prices and also to see how easy or hard a vacuum has been run its life. Then when the little old lady from Pasadena tries to sell you her Hoover Convertible that was seldom used and in like new condition and you see its had 100,000 hours put on it (11 years) and been through 2 motors it might not be such a good deal. lol

When the motor burns out, a vacuum shop could then write the old odometer readout and the service date onto the bottom of the vacuum body with a permanent paint marker and then reset the counter, and then you can also know how many hours have been put on the vacuum as a whole and the new motor.
It was just a thought I had that I thought would be great to also make it a lot easier to haggle on used vacuum prices and also to see how easy or hard a vacuum has been run its life. Then when the little old lady from Pasadena tries to sell you her Hoover Convertible that was seldom used and in like new condition and you see its had 100,000 hours put on it (11 years) and been through 2 motors it might not be such a good deal. lol
