Some of my Progress vacuums

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gsheen

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 23, 2011
Messages
3,455
Location
Cape Town South Africa
This vacuum was listed on FB market place for a while at a antique shop here in Cape Town.


Then one day Joanne came home and told me she had a early ( about a month ) birthday present for me.


 


Its probably the most complete vintage vacuum I own of its era.


I cannot find much info about it on the net appart from a picture of it in a german advert that unfortunately doesn't have much info like model or age of the vacuum.


 


The previous owner or shop also tried to respray the clear coat on the veneer with minimal success but I have left it for now as I am worried about damaging it. They also polished the name out of the badge but you can make out Progress special and the rating plate has it as a model psp 


 


Its also interesting that it doesn't have a on off switch, I presume it was probably located in the kettle style plug like some other models and that was replaced over the years. 

gsheen-2022051616115003500_1.jpg
 
Hi Tom 


 


Thats awesome 


I think my one may be a slightly older model or a different model as it was made in Germany,


it has a few differences mainly the rear of the machine and were the plug plugs into it.


 


Does the instruction book show a On /Off switch ? I am curious to know more about it


 


 


 


At some stage in the 70's Progress had a manufacturing plant here in South Africa too
 
So richtig gründlich

Love the branding & typography from the manuals, very mod
smiley-cool.gif



 


To your comment about it being made in Germany, I found this German Progress ad that looks like it may feature the same or a similar model. Source dates the ad in 1939


 


A Google Translation of the ad copy reads:


<blockquote>
<span class="VIiyi" lang="en"><span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b" data-language-for-alternatives="en" data-language-to-translate-into="de" data-phrase-index="0" data-number-of-phrases="7"><span class="Q4iAWc">Cleaning the house is now really thorough, since the great "PROGRESS" vacuum cleaner has helped.</span></span> <span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b" data-language-for-alternatives="en" data-language-to-translate-into="de" data-phrase-index="1" data-number-of-phrases="7"><span class="Q4iAWc">Faster, better, cheaper is the principle of these high-performance devices from Mauz & Pfeiffer,</span></span> <span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b" data-language-for-alternatives="en" data-language-to-translate-into="de" data-phrase-index="3" data-number-of-phrases="7"><span class="Q4iAWc">Stuttgart-Botnang.</span></span> <span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b" data-language-for-alternatives="en" data-language-to-translate-into="de" data-phrase-index="4" data-number-of-phrases="7"><span class="Q4iAWc">The relevant</span></span> <span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b" data-language-for-alternatives="en" data-language-to-translate-into="de" data-phrase-index="6" data-number-of-phrases="7"><span class="Q4iAWc">Specialty shops carry "PROGRESS"</span></span></span>


</blockquote>
<span class="VIiyi" lang="en"><span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b" data-language-for-alternatives="en" data-language-to-translate-into="de" data-phrase-index="6" data-number-of-phrases="7"><span class="Q4iAWc">The headline "So richtig gründlich" translates more literally to "Really thorough," but the rest of the sentence doesn't translate to English as smoothly when put in that order.
</span></span></span>

lektronic-2022051816215403350_1.jpg
 
While I have the owner's manual and it says they were made in America, and Consumer Reports (or Digest, I can't remember now) rated it, I have never seen a 110-volt Progess tank cleaner in person.
 
I found this

its from a different year but still interesting. I only speak a little German so I can barely understand it.
-Jack
 
What a great ad!

I can't get over how they'd invest 1 minute 37 seconds into an advertisement. Perhaps it was for cinemas, so it wouldn't have been anywhere near as expensive as if you wanted that amount of time on modern television.

My German is rusty. The words go more or less like this ...

I'm dust. If you don't clean, then there's dirt everywhere. I'm the enemy of cleanliness. [then some bits I just can't pick up]
(PROGRESS LOGO)
Progress brings help! [missed phrase] Progress gets rid of the dust.
The rug looks wonderul, just like a poem, the colours are just like bright lights. Progress turns work into a child's game.
Progress is quality. Progress is [can't get it]. Progress is an ideal appliance.
On the floor and [something] and in between seats/cushions, the dust is completely removed.
You can clean hangings, the curtains and walls [can't get the rest of that phrase]
With the fine brush you can get the dust from the piano [more I can't get] in very little time
The Venus turns around to [nope, lost here again ... perhaps "get clean for a party"]
You can use it for moths ... [then I can't get the final scene where the cleaner removes the dust cloud]

What fun ... and I need to practice my German a lot more :-)
 
Nice classic tv ad with animation! In the 1960’s, a standard tv commercial was 60 seconds long….so maybe at the start of European television, they even allowed 90 second commercials!

Most ads today are only 15 seconds long….the world has gotten faster!
 

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