fatalfranklin
Member
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2013
- Messages
- 12
Did you ever just see something that made you heart race and your head twirl....sigh...??!!??
Well, I did today! I got off the credit cards two years ago, it was a wicked battle, but I keep one around for catastrophes and emergencies. Today qualified as neither. It was pure lust!
Now, I'm not a vacuum cleaner aficionado or collector (yet, there's still time), but when I saw this baby, I just couldn't resist. It was dulled enamel, textured, teal blue, shaped like a bullet train, SOLID ?aluminum?, minimal plaaastic (yuck), chrome accents....MMmmm...boy was she sweet! It was sittin' behind the swathe of bulky old televisions at the local thrift shop. I stop in most days to see if there is anything worth re-selling. When I saw it, my head got all fuzzy, instantly I was groping it and fiddling with it. Checking out its insides, poking and prodding it. I nearly left my purse laying on the floor so that I could find an outlet to plug it into.
....And then I plugged it in. All the stuff at the thrift store is tested before it can go out on the sales but being a typical human, I have to hear it for myself. The cord was clean and vintagy but sturdy and "modern", no deterioration. I plugged it into the socket.....pressed the super-sleek chrome button.....it sprang to life...AAAaaaawwwhhhhmmmm.....the perfect whirring pitch of a well built motor with lots of life left in it.......I placed my hand over the intake....thwack! MAN does she SUCK!! And on the other end she BLOWS!!! WoW what a machine.
I know NOTHING about vacuum cleaners, except my mother has a Kirby from the early '70s and thinks it is the only vacuum cleaner ever made worth having. I know that everything I see in big box stores looks like a bad amusement park gimmick. And that what is offered at my local specialty shop seems like an expensive (mostly plastic and base metal) gimmick that I can't afford. Lastly I know the vacuum I settled on buying for my house was $50.00 new, mostly plastic, "Sanitaire" by Electrolux, performs adequately and will likely break or burn out before my cats die.
Like I said, I was scoping out the thrift store, like I do every day. Buying thrift store stuff and finding out what it is at home is like my lottery tickets. I justified this purchase (on the demon credit card) as a potential re-sale item. But really it was all for ME! I didn't even look around after I saw it...I just gripped it tightly in both arms and dashed to the cash register. Again, I have ZERO clue what I'm holding, just that I LUST it.
So here she is...I'm not sure what she is supposed to be called, and I can't read the serial number under her "hood", maybe 4--735.... Here's the info on the case:
Interstate Precision Products Corp.
Model C-4
Pat. 2639002D175657
July, 13 1951 Others pending
Side of the case reads:
23rd Anniversary Edition
She is in okay shape. After looking around she is missing a lot of the attachments. One foot and the hose isn't completely functional...but those things seem relatively minor to functionality. I see a lot of her sisters have swivel feet, instead of dragging nubs??!! I would LOVE LOVE LOVE any info you pro's have about this sweet machine. Especially where I might find parts and attachments. Maybe even the floor buffer head...mmmm...buff the wood...aah
Well, I did today! I got off the credit cards two years ago, it was a wicked battle, but I keep one around for catastrophes and emergencies. Today qualified as neither. It was pure lust!
Now, I'm not a vacuum cleaner aficionado or collector (yet, there's still time), but when I saw this baby, I just couldn't resist. It was dulled enamel, textured, teal blue, shaped like a bullet train, SOLID ?aluminum?, minimal plaaastic (yuck), chrome accents....MMmmm...boy was she sweet! It was sittin' behind the swathe of bulky old televisions at the local thrift shop. I stop in most days to see if there is anything worth re-selling. When I saw it, my head got all fuzzy, instantly I was groping it and fiddling with it. Checking out its insides, poking and prodding it. I nearly left my purse laying on the floor so that I could find an outlet to plug it into.
....And then I plugged it in. All the stuff at the thrift store is tested before it can go out on the sales but being a typical human, I have to hear it for myself. The cord was clean and vintagy but sturdy and "modern", no deterioration. I plugged it into the socket.....pressed the super-sleek chrome button.....it sprang to life...AAAaaaawwwhhhhmmmm.....the perfect whirring pitch of a well built motor with lots of life left in it.......I placed my hand over the intake....thwack! MAN does she SUCK!! And on the other end she BLOWS!!! WoW what a machine.
I know NOTHING about vacuum cleaners, except my mother has a Kirby from the early '70s and thinks it is the only vacuum cleaner ever made worth having. I know that everything I see in big box stores looks like a bad amusement park gimmick. And that what is offered at my local specialty shop seems like an expensive (mostly plastic and base metal) gimmick that I can't afford. Lastly I know the vacuum I settled on buying for my house was $50.00 new, mostly plastic, "Sanitaire" by Electrolux, performs adequately and will likely break or burn out before my cats die.
Like I said, I was scoping out the thrift store, like I do every day. Buying thrift store stuff and finding out what it is at home is like my lottery tickets. I justified this purchase (on the demon credit card) as a potential re-sale item. But really it was all for ME! I didn't even look around after I saw it...I just gripped it tightly in both arms and dashed to the cash register. Again, I have ZERO clue what I'm holding, just that I LUST it.
So here she is...I'm not sure what she is supposed to be called, and I can't read the serial number under her "hood", maybe 4--735.... Here's the info on the case:
Interstate Precision Products Corp.
Model C-4
Pat. 2639002D175657
July, 13 1951 Others pending
Side of the case reads:
23rd Anniversary Edition
She is in okay shape. After looking around she is missing a lot of the attachments. One foot and the hose isn't completely functional...but those things seem relatively minor to functionality. I see a lot of her sisters have swivel feet, instead of dragging nubs??!! I would LOVE LOVE LOVE any info you pro's have about this sweet machine. Especially where I might find parts and attachments. Maybe even the floor buffer head...mmmm...buff the wood...aah