How do you clean a Vacuum Motor Fan without removing the fan casing?

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Air

Usually vents filter air in vacuum. You get a vacuum that has blower and auction. This combo will get any more Clea.
Les
 
To clean the fan

without opening up the housing I would try reaching in the fan opening with an old dry toothbrush or similar. Then with another vacuum, put the hose over the opening and get as much out as you can. Then if you want to you can dampen an old cloth and wipe around the fan. Be sure it's dry before using it or you could have a mess all over, plus not good to run vacuum with moisture near wiring etc. It's really not that hard to just unscrew the two half round brackets that hold the motor in place. With those removed you can lift the motor housing off of the bottom chassis, and remove about 3-6 screws and you can open it up and do a really good cleaning.You could also check your carbon brushes while you're in there. Take a couple pictures as you take it apart, if you do, just to help you remember where things go! Especially if your not going to finish it in the same day,You'll learn a lot if you do an open surgery on it, but if you aren't comfortable doing it,don't. Maybe some day you'll find an old junker and you can try taking it apart, just to get a feel for it. Good luck either way you decide to clean up the fan.
 
You know....

I've always wanted to try using pipe cleaners in them I'm unsure how effective it would actually be but it may be worth a shot. I know we often blew the fans out with a powerful air compressor it was effective to a degree.
 
Compressed air. And I mean from a good sized compressor at 100+ psi. Get a long nozzle air blower and stick it into the fan housing.
 
I use one of my Electrolux's with an inflator nozzle and a small piece of tubing to use as a blower.

Just open the door on the top and attach your house to switch from sucking to blowing.

Also useful to inflate air mattresses, beach balls, snow tubes, etc.

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Roller question

I've been window shopping on the web for a new roller for the Foldaway and my bagged, non-self propelled Wind Tunnel Deluxe. Lucky me, they use the same roller! Here's the rub, on one sight I visited they had about 7 groupings of rollers for Hoovers, and in about 3 or 4 lists there would be, under the phrase,"also fits these models" and there would be a roller to fit mine. In each of these groups, there is a specific Hoover model that the list was mainly intended for, then follows the other models the roller fits. The rollers that also fit mine have different numbers from each other. The prices vary a couple dollars more or less. Do you think that the brushes are basically the same even though they have different numbers and slight price variances? Reason I ask is if they have 3 or 4 rollers that also fit my needs is , if one is better, that's what I'd go for. Also, most of the lists have a side note saying that Hoover no longer makes these belts and they give a new number for the after market belts. What do you think, a bit confusing,eh?
 

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