eurekaprince
Well-known member
Hi Mike,
The VG One was Eureka's first brush roll with beater bars. It came out around 1970, I think. It is an aluminum brush roll in the shape of a helix which allows more air flow in the brush roll chamber (it's not a solid cylinder like most brush rolls). Imagine a foot-long bar of aluminum that is twisted like a piece of pasta. The VG I has two solid aluminum beater bars - separated by the belt groove. It also has two replaceable brush strips separated by the belt groove. It is a very effective brush roll which gave Eureka its first top performance marks by Consumer Reports in 1973.
A few years later, Eureka introduced the VG Two. This also had two replaceable brush strips, but the beater bars were actually broken up into seven mini "fins" which were positioned on the brush roll so that they created a kind of "wave" motion as it hit the carpet nap. Eureka liked to advertise that this brush roll had seven beater bars. The VG II was a solid stainless steel cylinder - not a twisted helix form like the VG One.
The VG Three was Eureka's response to Hoover's new Quadraflex agitator in the 1980's. They both got rid of the metal beater bars and instead featured four bars of bristles set into plastic stiffeners which supposedly gave the brushes more "flinging" action. I always felt that a row of good stiff bristles would provide the same beating action as a solid metal bar. This VG Three was also a solid stainless steel cylinder.
The VG One was Eureka's first brush roll with beater bars. It came out around 1970, I think. It is an aluminum brush roll in the shape of a helix which allows more air flow in the brush roll chamber (it's not a solid cylinder like most brush rolls). Imagine a foot-long bar of aluminum that is twisted like a piece of pasta. The VG I has two solid aluminum beater bars - separated by the belt groove. It also has two replaceable brush strips separated by the belt groove. It is a very effective brush roll which gave Eureka its first top performance marks by Consumer Reports in 1973.
A few years later, Eureka introduced the VG Two. This also had two replaceable brush strips, but the beater bars were actually broken up into seven mini "fins" which were positioned on the brush roll so that they created a kind of "wave" motion as it hit the carpet nap. Eureka liked to advertise that this brush roll had seven beater bars. The VG II was a solid stainless steel cylinder - not a twisted helix form like the VG One.
The VG Three was Eureka's response to Hoover's new Quadraflex agitator in the 1980's. They both got rid of the metal beater bars and instead featured four bars of bristles set into plastic stiffeners which supposedly gave the brushes more "flinging" action. I always felt that a row of good stiff bristles would provide the same beating action as a solid metal bar. This VG Three was also a solid stainless steel cylinder.