This is Why Kirby Says to Empty the Bag Out After Each Use

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Sleepy bacteria is better than ones copulating pointlessly waiting to escape the paper bag and be shot out the exhaust holes of the vacuum, anxious to be inhaled by an innocent human or allergic aged cat.

Actually, freezing can do quite a bit of damage, so I've heard. It doesn't kill everything, but quite a bit. Entire animals for example.

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yeah,

the freeze can kill the dust mites....that eat our skin cells....also, would keep the food particles that were sucked up from feeding organisms thus....smells
 
lots of stuff can go in freezer. As was mentioned, kids toys. People put those frozen ice/hot things in there.

You wouldn't throw out a vacuum bag after one usage. One puts it in a plastic bag to keep any latent dust contained. I've never had a problem.

It works great. It's easy to try. I like that fresh smell that comes out when you replace the bag in the cleaner and start vacuuming. Much better than musty moldy yuck that some people get.
 
I mean, I don't see any harm in it. And it's not like something harmful you're putting in the freezer with the food, it's just dust.
 
just dust..... and stuff

in a paper bag, which is in a plastic bag, and it gets frozen.

Teddy bears get frozen when they get put in a plastic bag too.

I've always wondered what that blue gel is in those cold packs that one can use for therapeutic purposes. It's not popcicle water, that's for sure.
 
I may have solved another part of this large problem: always clean the brush roll after you're finished using the Kirby. Left unchecked, too much hair and lint around the brush roll will make it a bigger problem and thus reduces cleaning efficiency, and later on will cause all this hair and lint to get stuck in the fan chamber.

~Ben
 
That's true for any ...

 


 


"....always clean the brush roll after you're finished using the..."


 


power nozzle, or for that matter any brushed attachment like a floor or dusting brush.  It's like this: when one uses a paint brush, tooth brush, vegetable brush, etc.  you clean those (or should be).  The same goes for a vacuum brush.  Failure to remove old hair and string only inhibits a vacuum brush and can damage the roll or possibly the power head.  


 


Here's some pics of my reconditioned 1983ish Kenmore double-brush power nozzle.  I wish I had the "before" pictures.  I got it with some other vacuum parts and I don't think the seller even knew what it was.  


It looked really bad.  It had a big spot of paint dripped on the top, was dirty from sitting many years, the neck was cracked (though oddly still useable), the cord was pulled out, there was so much sand and lint in the motor it made a horrendous sound, and the brush roll was just covered with string, a couple of pieces of thin guage wire, hair, and who knows what else.  


 


After thoroughly taking it apart, soaking plastic parts and carefully cleaning, removing all the gunk from the motor and lubricating it, and of course taking a scissors and cutting length-wise and removing all the junk on the brush roll, removing and cleaning the brush strips, etc. . it now functions and sounds as it should.   The brush roll is black painted wood, which was scrubbed and waxed; but look at the paint worn off by the stuff that was on there.


 


It still bares the scars of damage done.  How in the world could someone not know there was something wrong with what they were doing?  Look at the gouges in the plastic underneath.  Thank-fully, those don't affect cleaning or suction.    Incredibly, it still has both of the thin plastic support bars that are known to break.


 


Always clean your brushed attachments after each use.  It only takes a few seconds with the wand of the hose going back and forth over the brushes.  And a brush roll with string or long hair wrapped around it will often clean itself if you simply cut with a scissors, length-wise through the mess, and then vacuum a few strokes on carpeting.  The brush roll can throw off the cut pieces and suction takes it away.


 


I love taking stuff like this and bringing it back to full functionality, or as close as it can get.

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Clening brushrolls after use--the hairs,strings,threads can get caught in the bearings at the ends of the roll tearing them up-and the housing,too!And for canister powernozzles-puts a stress on the motor and belt.They can overheat.The belt will break and the motor can burn out.
 

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