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clive

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Richmond
Hi
I’ve been told it’s possible to work out the date The Hoover was made by reading the serial number
Can anyone tell me how to do this
Many thanks
Clive
 
As I understand it, Hoover USA cleaners' months and years of manufacture have been coded in the first four digits of the company's serial numbers since 1988. For example 0389 would be March (03) of 1989 (89).

Without access to a database of the company's serial numbers and their corresponding production times there is no way to determine the information of an earlier Hoover cleaner. Unfortunately, I think those company records were discarded and/or deleted.

Hoover Ltd. began coding the time of manufacture in its serial numbers in 1967 using 3 digits: one for the last digit of the year, and two for the month. They came after the model #. To illustrate: U10166081234, displays the model, 'U1016' (Junior Dirtsearcher), and the '608' following represents August 1976.
 
how would you read this one then?

I assume that the question can be answered by someone other than Paul?

Taking that for granted, I would like to interject a few ideas I have, about the machine that you have in question; which is a Self Propelled Concept One, which began life technically in 1978 (for sure, and catalogs and ads prove such), and ran thru about 1978-81/2 IIRC in the guise of the striped blue bag, with blue trim.

The way I've understood it, and was explained above, that there was no ACTUAL discernible way to know EXACTLY when a machine was mfg'd out of Hoover pre 1988. And only then it was year, and month. That usually suits most.

So this U3101 was well BEFORE that year. So it's virtually impossible to know exactly when. But...

I have been, and many others have too; been privvy to a few actual truths from various Hoover guru's and more. Many plausible explanations, using factory document(s) or "the production book", filled with corporate typewritten "proven" bits of information that can kind-of help get a basic clue, are out there to help those who "need to know" have a semblance of a clue.. which is:

Hoover at that time usually built most models in batches of 5000. That was how they as I've learned, built the Convertibles. So it's logic that they did the same with their entire upright line(s). Then the line would shift for the various sub models of that particular style. And would in a safe assumption, rotate back every few weeks, to a month maybe, back to the model in question, as stock was depleted etc.

Hoover also almost ALWAYS began production with serial number 1001. So in production your machine was : 00001001-(start) to-(yours)- 00020277. Using the 00001001 as our guide, your machine was the 19,276 model out the door, probably in the very late months of 1977 or very early in 1978. Only someone who could exact the start date of production could narrow it down better.

But let's assume "for-fun", that they began production in November of 1977 ( like a car model year), and the batches were 5000 (monthly). The unit you have would have been in batch #4, which is logical if it's proven somehow that they did IN fact build them still in the batches of 5000, for the Concept One. So again, this unit would have been the 4,276th machine off the line in that fourth batch. So very late in the (month). Than said, yours would probably have, or even could have actually been built in February of 1978. Which in theory seems quite plausible, and to an extent almost a given.

But again, we use "for fun", for just that. Again, it's all in corporate, typewritten records long dumped or destroyed by a once great company, bought by an old M brand wringer Company, sold again, wrung out, then slaughtered/ killed off. And now is a faceless conglomerate smacking out caca.. Or whomever did the deed..my guess is COUGH****TTI***COUGH!


Chad

Ann Arbor Michigan

dirtmaster37-2018111710172900212_1.jpg
 
If only people in the company would have caught all those old files and saved them rather than let them be trashed. Auto workers did that plenty of times but I guess vacuums weren't the same.
 
huskyvacs

there are copies of the "hoover bible" with dates for machines before 1988 but the only copies i know go from 1908 to 1973. between 73 and 88 there is very little information out there.
 
It is worrisome that so much information about products that really aren't that old, seems to be so unimportant it's just evaporated.  


 


I suppose it's human nature to just take things for granted that are found in such abundance.  Unlike the new technologies of the 1950s when everything was so well documented and carefully handled.  Once home appliances matured in the 90s, we as a society, could afford to just throw away old stuff.


 


I cannot even think of models or model names of vacuums in the last 15 years.  .... unless it's my central vacuum.  lol.  


 


It seems like the less expensive and smaller in size an appliance is, the less documented it is, too. 


 


Would we consider this attitude 'success' ?  I suppose it is.
 
@paul how would you read this one then?

View attachment 123846

Based on when the Hoover Concept One U3101 model appeared in advertisements from newspapers and sales flyers that I can locate, which was from 12 July 1978 to 4 Nov 1984, and when the instruction manual was printed (1978), and based on @paul 's description of the post-1967 serial number formatting ("one for the last digit of the year, and two for the month"), and @dirtmaster37 saying they used production numbers of 5,000, I can go along and pick that out of the serial number and try to make sense of it.

Without knowing what color yours is, I can not find anything of a Hoover U3101/Concept One existing in 1977 in any correspondence regardless of color, so it absolutely was not on the market until summer 1978 at the very least. It for sure would have showed up in Christmas sales rush advertisements if it was ready to roll out in Dec 1977, so there being none for the holiday sales season means it did not exist for purchase yet (assuming there is no more earlier correspondence to be found that has fallen into the digital void). Likewise this model was never mentioned again after summer 1984. So I can presume this U3101 was sold from 1978 through 1984 whether at retail or in discount stores after it aged out. This makes sense because the Concept II came out in 1983.

I found two more U3101'S on eBay - all blue with the floral motif on the bag door.

00540373 - blue w/motif
00258333 - blue w/motif

Based on advertisements, we know the the blue one with the motif came out in 1983.

From this I think I can work out the date as such, where 'u' is unit number, 'ww' is week and 'y' is year;

uuuuu/ww/y
---------------
00540/37/3
00258/33/3

This matches the 1983 production and sales of that specific vacuum.

So plugging in this now-known formatting into your vacuum in specific;

00020277
becomes
00020/27/7

The best I can come up with would be 27th week of 1977, which would be July 4, 1977 to July 10, 1977. With a vacuum production number of the 20th one that rolled off the line that week. 20 vacuums divided by 7 days would be 2.9 vacuums per day - lets just say about 3 - thats just for the Concept One product line of course. That seems reasonable. Also just FYI, "Star Wars" came out 2 months before this Hoover, so we know what those employees were doing!

It does appear from what I am reading that 1977 was also the same year that then-CEO Merle Rawson moved Hoover Worldwide from New York back to North Canton, OH, which might account for delays in shipments to where even though the vacuum rolled off the assembly line in Summer 1977, they were stockpiled and didnt ship out until spring of the following year. Hoover had experienced a oversaturation of the appliance market both from themselves and other makers in 1974 and 1975 which resulted in stagnant sales for the company and a stock slump for 1976/1977, which is why I guess he made the decision to relocate the company HQ in 1977. This of course would delay any and all shipments because return addresses and company mailings would all need to be re-corrected and re-labeled with the new address.

This is just an idea I came up with on how the serial numbers are formatted (on the Concept One at least) from an hour and a half of research so I'm not going to make any claims that it's God's bible, but it does make sense insofar. Maybe it helps? Maybe not. Good luck!
 
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Also another idea - I asked Grok AI to interpret all this data as a hail mary card. I know, I know, boo AI, throw tomatoes. Hear me out, keep in mind that AI can hallucinate and just make stuff up, so don't take this directly to heart, but worth a thought here. Just trying all manner of possibilities.

GrookHover1.jpg
GrokHoover2.jpg
GrokHoover3.jpg
GrokHoover4.jpg
GrokHoover5.jpg
GrokHoover6.jpg
GrokHoover7.jpg
GrokHoover8.jpg


=====================================

As a sanity check, to make sure it's not hallucinating, I asked it to decode Kirby's serial numbers, which are easy and well known to everyone.

======================================

GrokHoover9.jpg
GrokHoover10.jpg
 
Last edited:
Based on when the Hoover Concept One U3101 model appeared in advertisements from newspapers and sales flyers that I can locate, which was from 12 July 1978 to 4 Nov 1984, and when the instruction manual was printed (1978), and based on @paul 's description of the post-1967 serial number formatting ("one for the last digit of the year, and two for the month"), and @dirtmaster37 saying they used production numbers of 5,000, I can go along and pick that out of the serial number and try to make sense of it.

Without knowing what color yours is, I can not find anything of a Hoover U3101/Concept One existing in 1977 in any correspondence regardless of color, so it absolutely was not on the market until summer 1978 at the very least. It for sure would have showed up in Christmas sales rush advertisements if it was ready to roll out in Dec 1977, so there being none for the holiday sales season means it did not exist for purchase yet (assuming there is no more earlier correspondence to be found that has fallen into the digital void). Likewise this model was never mentioned again after summer 1984. So I can presume this U3101 was sold from 1978 through 1984 whether at retail or in discount stores after it aged out. This makes sense because the Concept II came out in 1983.

I found two more U3101'S on eBay - all blue with the floral motif on the bag door.

00540373 - blue w/motif
00258333 - blue w/motif

Based on advertisements, we know the the blue one with the motif came out in 1983.

From this I think I can work out the date as such, where 'u' is unit number, 'ww' is week and 'y' is year;

uuuuu/ww/y
---------------
00540/37/3
00258/33/3

This matches the 1983 production and sales of that specific vacuum.

So plugging in this now-known formatting into your vacuum in specific;

00020277
becomes
00020/27/7

The best I can come up with would be 27th week of 1977, which would be July 4, 1977 to July 10, 1977. With a vacuum production number of the 20th one that rolled off the line that week. 20 vacuums divided by 7 days would be 2.9 vacuums per day - lets just say about 3 - thats just for the Concept One product line of course. That seems reasonable. Also just FYI, "Star Wars" came out 2 months before this Hoover, so we know what those employees were doing!

It does appear from what I am reading that 1977 was also the same year that then-CEO Merle Rawson moved Hoover Worldwide from New York back to North Canton, OH, which might account for delays in shipments to where even though the vacuum rolled off the assembly line in Summer 1977, they were stockpiled and didnt ship out until spring of the following year. Hoover had experienced a oversaturation of the appliance market both from themselves and other makers in 1974 and 1975 which resulted in stagnant sales for the company and a stock slump for 1976/1977, which is why I guess he made the decision to relocate the company HQ in 1977. This of course would delay any and all shipments because return addresses and company mailings would all need to be re-corrected and re-labeled with the new address.

This is just an idea I came up with on how the serial numbers are formatted (on the Concept One at least) from an hour and a half of research so I'm not going to make any claims that it's God's bible, but it does make sense insofar. Maybe it helps? Maybe not. Good luck!
Impressive research and analytics!
 
Also another idea - I asked Grok AI to interpret all this data as a hail mary card. I know, I know, boo AI, throw tomatoes. Hear me out, keep in mind that AI can hallucinate and just make stuff up, so don't take this directly to heart, but worth a thought here. Just trying all manner of possibilities.

View attachment 171627
View attachment 171626
View attachment 171625
View attachment 171624
View attachment 171623
View attachment 171622
View attachment 171621
View attachment 171620


=====================================

As a sanity check, to make sure it's not hallucinating, I asked it to decode Kirby's serial numbers, which are easy and well known to everyone.

======================================

View attachment 171628
View attachment 171629
Wow, you have officially brought Vacuumland into the 2020s! The data is definitely plausible.
 

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