One time I loaned out my Electrolux Olympia one...
What the heck does this have to do with anything????? I'm a gettin' to it. I have an Electrolux Olympia one that I found in the garbage in 1988. When it comes to that machine, I could be charged with vacuum abuse. - Anyway - I loaned it to someone who was moving, had a (whatever)$40.00 machine, and needed to do some above the floor cleaning. While it was loaned out, and since I don't use any of my restored machines for actual work, I have to say, the house didn't get vacuumed for about two weeks. Yuck! I know!
Then I came back from North Canton. Not the convention. A mini-meet the year prior. While there, I was given a Hoover Convertible. I'm not a Hoover expert AT ALL so, I can only say that it is medium blue, has a vinyl button-snap outer bag, no headlight, and a disappointingly short cord.
Will you please get to a point here?....
The Convertible needed to be cleaned up, and the Lux having been returned, I spent an evening doing a quick tune-up of the convertible. I used the Lux to help clean it. I put a new "C" bag in it, and went to try it out. I could not believe the crap that that Hoover got out of the carpet!!! I was so ashamed of the Lux. Then it occurred to me that I hadn't vacuumed in two weeks, wiped the sweat from my brow, and quickly did the three-square foot test that they taught us when I sold Electrolux. I vacuumed the test area very slowly like you did Eric, with the Hoover. Then I put fresh electrical tape on the Lux aftermarket hose and covered the same area. With a brand-new Arm and Hammer bag in the Lux, It did manage to pull still more dirt out. I was relieved - Whew!
That feeling didn't last long though. I then went and got the oldest, weakest machine I had at the time - my Lux model XII, with the (crude at best) rug tool. I have two NIB cloth bags for my Lux XXX, One Lux issued, one aftermarket. I put the orange aftermarket bag in the XII, clicked in a non-leaking "L" hose, and guess what? While very, very, little the XII managed to pull still more dirt.
Has anyone ever put their ear on the hose end/handle and then vacuumed? You can hear grit, (what I was taught to be the real carpet eater) hit the hose end. Admittedly, one looks pretty ridiculous vacuuming with an ear stuck to the hose, but you CAN hear the sand/grit. Try it. I did that with the XII, and heard grit.
So, now what? Three distinctly different machine types, covering the center portion of the last century from the mid-1930's then the late sixties, and finally, the eighties. All pulled some amount of dirt after the other. Starting with the most powerful to the weakest. Beater bar, brush only PN4, then a hunk of metal with a slot cut in the bottom of it.
Eric, the cut-open bag from the Sanitaire is that a piece of Easter basket grass? I hate that stuff! It's as bad as tinsel at Christmas time.
Long-winded I know. Just wanted to share my experience. Perhaps no one's machine is any better or worse than anyone Else's. Perhaps it's a matter of preference. What works best for the situation, the user, etc.
Rick