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luxflairguy

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 23, 2007
Messages
440
Location
Wilmington, NC
Hi Tom!

I'm wondering if this is another of the rare Eureka upright nozzles like the Airway. Beat up, but it does fire up. The bellows is still very pliable. Do tell! Wand is for a Filter Queen. This just sat on Ebay several lyears ago, but I had a hunch. Paid $10.00!
Greg

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No it is not for the Air-way....

Because the one for the Airway was marked as such. This one bears the Eureka name, and was created for the large commercial Eureka canister. Phillip Muller is the only other one who has one of these.
 
Jason is correct. There are several odd things that point to this perhaps being a vac shop "throw together" from parts they could order. For instance, The hood has a cut out for the handle pivot. If that had been made by Eureka either for an airway or one of their commercial canisters, there would've been no cut out in the hood for the handle pivot. Eureka would not have had access to a filter queen Wand. It appears to me that a repair shop ordered the rear portion with the handle release pedal, added it to an existing eureka upright, and added The filter queen wand.
 
Yes, this was before Eureka introduced their Power Nozzle. Don Clark first asked them to build this for his Air Way distributorship, since Eureka was already building them for the Commercial Canister (think 1968). Air-Way's first power nozzle was a Hamilton Beach upright with a wand, but that didn't last too long as the machine was very cheaply made. The Eureka upright as Power Nozzle lasted until about 1973 when Air-Way made the RugMaster power nozzle themselves. Air-Way distributorships COULD continue to buy the Eureka nozzle if they wished, as they were independent distributorships.
 
Yes the eureka and Airway version of this had it's own suction fan. It's a full Eureka upright but with a wand and bellow in place of the bag.
It really was not a very good design as the airflow of the upright was to much and the canister struggled to keep up with it. (My Opinion anyway)
I demoed one time the whole set up on a rug and it did an ok job sort of lifting the edge of the rug, then I took the airway hose off and the power head by itself really beat and shook that rug and lifted it up off the floor. All that aside it's still a lot of fun to play with and I'm very pleased with mine.
 
Just finally got my 405C - B cleaned up so I thought I'd add it here. It could really stand to be sanded and repainted but I don't want to lose all the original labels.

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Seriously?

I am confused. You bought a cobbled together head that languished on EBay for $10.00. Now you hold it hostage for $75.00 plus shipping or you will throw it away. Why not offer it for what you have into it or just donate plus the cost of shipping? I do not like to make replies like this, but it just didn't make sense.
 
Let me rephrase

I have a Eureka vacuum that needs to go. I picked it up for free from Tom at the Vacuum museum event. I'm willing to sell it for $175.00. Pick up only. If not sold by Saturday, I will post a video of it being smashed with a sledgehammer.

Yup. That should clarify my point.

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