Todays yard sale finds

VacuumLand – Vintage & Modern Vacuum Enthusiasts

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BAD brushrolls(like that 1)

I've seen a couple brushrolls that bad before. saved maybe 1 of them. literally had to use a tiny screwdriver to pick the wedged dirt out from between the bristles. amazingly on the other ones the bearings and end caps were still good so I kept them as spare parts. Had 2 once that the people didn't even know they wore the bristles right down to the nubs!
 
a tiny screw driver

I have seen many brush rolls like that come into my shop. Often on orecks continuously used with broken belts. I have about a 90% success rate of saving them. A tip: I clean/ cut off the larger debris including hair. Then re-install the roller with a new belt a run the vacuum. For really stubborn debris a wire brush works wonders while the vacuum and roller is running. I do recommend safety goggles for that step. Debris will end up all over the bench but its an efficient way to clean it up fast.
 
Favorite

Although they're loud and the build quality is down, I still prefer a bagged Windtunnel upright over other clean air machines. I agree the Windtunnels of the past are built much better, and I have been using synthetic cloth bags from DVC I believe, and find they work very well. The short hose issue is not a problem with me, as I use my FQ Princess III when I need to do above floor cleaning/bare floors. The Windtunnel grooms my wall-to-wall better than any other clean air machine that I've had, including some high-end machines.
 
Those bagged windtunnels are pretty good machines they move alot of air for a bypass upright you got a nice one like the blue the bagless one looks good to. I have had bad luck with the hose system on the original bagless windtunnel . Good finds
 
We get the same over here - I think the vacuum cleaner must be the most neglected appliance in most homes - people just cant be bothered maintaining them. I mean, what would happen of you just bought a car from new, and just drove it every day, never serviced it, never checked anything for wear, never cleaned it etc? exactly, it would break down, and its the same for vacuums, they are machines with moving parts - and I cant understand someone spending £300 on a brand new Dyson, and then running it into the ground with no thought for its wellbeing, and then moaning and groaning that Dyson are crap, its the worst cleaner ever, when it stops picking up, or the motor starts arcing after just a year or so!
On the Dysons I buy to refurbish, so many of them have clogged brushrolls, and the filters are just heavily clogged its a chronic problem. I cant beleive what some people sell off for just a few pounds for the simple reason that they are ignorant to their cleaner's needs. I bought a Kirby Ultimate G in poor condition that the seller on Ebay was selling just because it kept switching on and off when she was hoovering with it, and because the body was heavily tarnished from lack of any polishing - with a bit of work, it was near perfect again - that seller owned it for just 8 years and it cost her over £1200, but she never maintained it properly and lost a hell of a lot of money on it.
Just another symptom of our throwaway society nowadays.
This pic is of a DC04 I recently bought for just £5 - the seller was selling it as it didnt work any more - its a rare limited edition model, and I rushed there to fetch it back. With a lot of work and a replacement power cable it is perfect again, but it was absolutely filthy inside and out:

madabouthoovers++8-15-2012-11-17-1.jpg
 

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