Oley Owens' Old Kirby

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electrolux137

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Jun 30, 2022
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174
Location
Los Angeles
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A month or so ago a member of my church named Oley Owens came up to me and said, "I read in the newsletter about the work you did on Earlean Walker's Kirby vacuum.* I also have an old Kirby. Would you have a look at it?"

I said I would, and a couple of weeks later when I got out of my car one Sunday morning I looked up the street and saw Mr. Owens pushing an old Kirby up the sidewalk!

When he got up to me, I could see that the model was a Dual Sanitronic 50, from the year 1964 -- making it an even 50 years old! I could tell that other than needing a good cleaning up, it was in very good condition. So I said I'd take it home and give it a "spa treatment."

I brought it home and took it apart and cleaned and renovated all the housing and motor parts and gave the bearings a lube-job. I discovered that the cloth bag needed to be replaced as there was a small hole down at the bottom. I also put in a new belt and light bulb.

When I was finished with it, I delivered it to Mr. Owens. He seemed pleased with his "new Kirby" and gave it a test run around his living room.

I was happy to do this for him -- rebuilding old vacuum cleaners is something that has brought me great pleasure and satisfaction over the years. I see it as a special way of helping others through my affection for vintage vacuums. It's always a real treat to find someone who is still using one of those great old cleaners.

Now that Mr. Owens' Kirby has been made as-new again, there's no reason it couldn't last for another 50 years!

Here's a bunch of photos.

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* Ms. Walker is another member of my church - - she now has an as-new 1961-vintage Kirby!

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Very nice job on Owens Kirby!!Like that bag!!!Where did you get it?Would like one for one of my D50's.Did you replace the motor brushes-from the picture they looked pretty worn.At the tool place if I encountered ones that worn I replaced them.then for sure another many decades of vacuuming fun with that Kirby-Glad you were able to help the Owen Kirby.Did the bearings need replacement?In Kirbys I have dealt with the front one usually has to be replaced--since its behind the fan-this is the first one that succumbs to dust. had to replace the front bearing in my Tornado vac motor-was full of dust!Grainger provided the replacements.
 
And couldn't beleive all of the stuff that was in that machine-almost looks like fluff from old green shag carpet!Would have made a meal for one of my "Pigs" use the Pig to clean out other vacuums.Would have to guess that Kirbys bag wasn't dumpted after each use.
 
Great work! Older Kirby vacuums are a lot of fun to work on. I really like the way you staged the photo with everything disassembled in the order it goes together. I'll have to remember that. I'm terrible at taking photos. Love the debris photo too! And yes, I too love the "Bisonesque" bag!
 
I'm still amazed..

at how functional they still are as an everyday vacuum and how well they clean. I had been using a Sentria as my everyday cleaner( i vacuum my tiny house once a week) and decided to pull out my DSD50 to give it a whirl around the house. I was SHOCKED at the amount of crud I cleaned out from the bag after vacuuming the entire house - and this was was a clean bag prior to starting. The amount that was dumped was the size of a football! I love that little machine!
 
BEAUTIFUL Charles!!!!

I'm also curious as to where that bag came from! I'm shocked at how shiny a bath made the Kirby! Charles, would you mind if I sent you some of my Kirbys for a 'spa day'? 
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I like the plaid bag too -- I think it's quite fetching. It's a "N.O.S." genuine Kirby bag, but I don't remember now where I got it! In fact, I didn't even know I had it! It was in one of my boxes of replacement bags and I came across it looking for a replacement for the machine.

I had planned to put another original bag on the machine, but when I saw this one, I thought it would be a good choice for someone who actually planned to use it. The Sani-Scraper is made of hard plastic instead of cardboard like the original bags, so it would do the job a lot better. (However, I did mention to the man that he needs to empty out the bag once or twice a decade hahaha!)

I did keep the original bag. It can be patched which would be fine for displaying and "playing house," but I didn't want to return the machine to an actual user in that condition as the patch could give way.

Of course I did replace the carbon brushes. They were practically worn down to a nub, although I've come across far worse!

The front bearing was fine. I suspect this Kirby was repaired somewhere along the line. The rug nozzle bumper had been replaced with one in a dark-chocolate (Classic Ω) color, and the brush roll had been replaced with a four-bristle model

To Ben, the machine had that brush roll installed in it when Oley brought it to me. Since it was in perfect condition once I cleaned it up, I put it back in.

When I walked into the man's home and saw his green cut-pile carpeting, it looked very familiar to me, having had my arm elbow-deep in the bag pulling all that filth out of it. (Yes, I did wear a dust mask, and I did it outside.)

Did any of y'all notice how cloudy and discolored the belt lifter was? It looked like it had a heavy film of nicotine on it, but that wasn't what it was -- otherwise, all the plastic bits would have been similarly discolored. I think the plastic just degraded somehow. I had a spare one that I put on the machine.

I also enjoy working on older Kirbys. They are easy to rebuild, especially compared with modern plastic machines that have heat-bonded or glued parts, hidden screws, mysterious connectors, etc.

A non-collector commented in an email, "I think those old Kirbys are very sexy." I knew what he meant -- sexy in a design sense, not, well, you know. He is an architect, and anything with perfectly balanced and proportioned lines and dimensions would appeal to him.
 
So pretty all clean and that handsome bag! Can you imagine how well that would sell if they looked like that new? Clean, simple, sexy
 
Think I will need to dig out one of my D50's and give it a try-been a long time since I used one.The NSS wouldn't mind slurping out the junk from the dump bag.The NSS has the GIANT paper bag!Holds many gallons of stuff.Sometimes the paper bag gets so heavy you have to be careful taking it out of the cloth bag so it doesn't tear!At the dump--the bag gets shoved into the Baker Compactor "Box"!
 
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That's actually an older setup. My current rig has a Model XXX with it instead of a G. It does a good job of catching most -- but not all -- of the flying debris from the polishing wheel. Attentive housewife that I am, I empty the bag after each use! hahaha

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