"Mom, we need a new vacuum... this one's too dusty"

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gmerkt

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Joined
Dec 11, 2018
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3
Location
Edmonds WA
"OK Shaneesha, but check the bag first." Shaneesha thinks, "Bag???"

"Oh mom, I think I found the sock that dad lost."

So this is how a G6 found itself when it came to me. Actually, the machine is in pretty nice shape except for the bag and allied components being filthy dusty. Everything works as it should, cord is intact, even the shine is pretty good on it. They probably junked it because of the dust issue.

To someone's minor credit, the did use masking tape in an attempt to secure the sock.

gmerkt++3-3-2013-21-22-32.jpg
 
WOW

hahahaha are you kidding me? its amazing how people that can afford a kirby cant afford the bags
 
Oh, do I get some real winners. I should've taken a picture of it, but I got a Kenmore Progressive not long ago that had a Hoover A series bag in it. The bag was secured into place by two drywall screws. The A bag has a much larger opening than the Kenmore U bag, even with the rubber seal taken into account. Consequently, the blow-by was significant. The drywall screws kept the bag from blowing off but that's about it.
 
You know what I think?

I think vacuum bags are just one of those things people just typically don't "THINK" to buy, and then they run out and have to do something astonishing like this. Something like this would have been more believable before we all had access to the internet. I remember vacuum bags being a pain to find - but now things are so easy to find & order
 
I don't know if garden hose would work well for inner tube (inflation issues) but it could be wrapped around the rim as a kind of ersatz tire.

When I was a kid some Saturdays I would go down to work with my dad. In those years (1950's), it was still customary for many auto dealer service departments to be open on Saturday mornings. We lived in the suburbs but his work was in the downtown area. On these mornings, I would get to see many strange sights that were unseen in the 'burbs. One such as a grizzled old man who walked a bicycle around, carrying a load of what looked like refuse. We refer to people like this now as homeless, but in the '50's they were commonly called bums. This old man didn't have money for bicycle tires, so he'd wound and tied hemp rope onto the wheel rims for tires.

My dad was born in 1919, so he became a teenager in the Depression. His father farmed, would (usually) have a cash crop to sell in the Fall to pay the debts, but also grew and raised much of their own subsistence food. But money was very short. They did have enough money to keep a second-hand car, but maintenance on it was iffy. My dad told me once the car needed brakes but they had no money for brake linings. So they went to the barn and found some old leather strap from a discarded threshing machine belt, cut shapes to fit the metal brake shoes and riveted the leather on for linings.

The car was a 1926 Gardner straight eight, look that one up on Wiki.

The old timers had a saying that went, "Poor folks has poor ways."
 
even if people don't think to buy bags, how hard is it to wait a couple hours or a day or two when you make it to the store and wait to vacuum then? Will their houses fall apart if they have to wait a day or so to properly use their vacuum?
 
I've seen people use F&G bags on Hoovers that take a tpye A bag and also on some Kirbys... but never a sock. Sometimes I wonder if people do things like that because of expence of bags or trouble finding them or is it because they just don't care if they use the wrong things.
 

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