UK Trident Vacs

VacuumLand – Vintage & Modern Vacuum Enthusiasts

Help Support VacuumLand:

turbomaster1984

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 12, 2007
Messages
923
Location
Tibshelf, Derbyshire
We are both just back from a fabululous long weekend break in Cardiff with Mathew and with some holiday souvenirs collected along the way.

First off is this amazing Trident vac in blue,

Nice and solid with quality attachments.

Amazingly quiet in operation and also has excellnt suction and cleaning power,

So to start off heres some pics, lets see what your Tridents are like too...

7-22-2009-09-22-21--Turbomaster1984.jpg
 
Electrolux

I never did quite understand why Electrolux machines are so radically different (and in some cases better) in the U.K. and Canada than the ones we have here in the states. And IMHO, the quality really plummeted with the new Electrolux made by Eureka. We all know Aerus is the only "true" Electrolux.
 
tridents

i have never seen this Trident model before, but i have been asking if anyone rememberesd or had info on trident "loaf" in yellow and white. I described them as in the body of z80 but have now realised the handle was different... It had been over 30 years since i had seen 1 as 3 families in my street had them. The door to door salesman must have had a field day in our street! as i now know Trident was a door to door brand name. Anyhow i was so thrilled when Walter (watsonw) was kind enough to send me copies of the manual to his Trident 156 as i now no is the model. Here we are ... seen by me for the 1st time in over 3 decades.... the Trident 156 ...

View attachment 7-22-2009-12-42-42--z30soulbrother.jpg
 
Blue Trident

Lovely example.....rare, let alone in that condition.

I remember them when they were introduced in 1974/5.

Have you got all the tools i.e. turbo brush and crevice brush ?

I have the 'burnt orange' VOLTA' version; only differences being the brown furniture guard / seal and that the dark weave running through the hose braid is like the lux 345.

In my view the best 'sealed motor unit' and predominately plastic bodied lux ever made and I do actually remember clearly thinking thirty odd years ago just how powerful and manouverable they were, I imagine they were probably the most expensive of luxes domestic cleaners....probably why they were demonstrated door to door ....never remember them in the showrooms ?

REALLY Must get courage and butt up to getting a scanner and digi cam..........don't know anything about them !!!!

Congrats on that very lucky find.

Regards, Walter, Newport, Shropshire.
 
Just a response to Karl's comment....

Hi Karl,

I think you have the Eureka / Electrolux relationship a little inversed. No Electrolux vac is made by Eureka - it's the other way around. All Eurekas are now made by Electrolux. Even the American-designed power nozzles and uprights that are not available in Europe are now in essence made by Sweden's Electrolux. Let me try to explain the history very briefly.

Up until the 1950's, North American Electroluxes were made by the same company that designed and produced the European Electroluxes - so the vacs looked pretty similar. In 1968, the European Electrolux company sold it's share in North America's Electrolux, including the right to use the "Electrolux" name in North America. From 1968 on, they were completely separate companies, with completely different designs and machines.

Up until the Free Trade agreement signed between Canada and the USA in the early 1990's, the Canadian government forced all USA companies to open up separate plants in Canada if they wanted to sell their products here (GM, Ford, Electrolux, Hoover, GE, Eureka, etc.). So, often the Canadian plants would have different designs for their products than their American counterparts. That's why the Electroluxes made in Montreal were so different from the one's made in Old Greenwich Connecticut.

Sweden's Electrolux bought back the right to use their name in North America in 2003, and at the same time bought the right to sell European Electroluxes like the Oxygen canister (made in Hungary) in North America. Because of this, the North American Electrolux company you are so fond of was now forced to use the name Aerus.

To make matters more complicated, in 1974, Europe's Electrolux bought the Eureka Williams Company of Bloomington Illinois and its sister plant in Kitchener Ontario. For about 30 years after that, Eureka's vacs were still for the most part made in North America, though some Eureka vacs were actually Electroluxes imported from Europe and relabelled Eureka. That's why our Eureka "Excalibur" was actually a Volta machine, and our Eureka Oxygen was actually a Swedish Electrolux design married to a North American power nozzle.

When Sweden's Electrolux bought back the rights to their name in the US and Canada, they began to sell vacs with the Eureka name and the Electrolux name. The American Electrolux company of 1968-2003 which you are so fond of is now know as Aerus.

Just a final note - Consumer Reports consistently rates the Electrolux Oxygen (with the Eureka Power Nozzle) better in performance (and lower in cost) than the Aerus Guardian.

If you want a more detailed history, see the link below.

Hope this helps explain why the European Electroluxes look so different from the Connecticut Electroluxes with which you are more familiar.

I'm excited to see the first pics of the new Aerus, aren't you?

Brian :) in Canada

http://www.ristenbatt.com/eu/lux-name.mv?SubWin=Yes
 
Wow, thank you Brian. I couldn't have asked for a more detailed answer than that. Even though Electrolux is still Electrolux in the European sense, I still have a particular liking for the Aerus machines. I am enthusiastic about the new Aerus machine. I have a Lux 9000 (thanks to Nathan Thomas) which I absolutely love! I don't put too much stock in CR surveys. I worked for Remington electric shavers up until 5 yesrs ago, and CR would constantly (and wrongfully) give Remington poor scores. On an interesting (although irrelevant sidenote), in nearly every major American city we had the GM New Look "Fishbowl" transit bus. It was the workhorse of the industry until 1977, when the U.S. Federal Government mandated an Advanced Design Bus (or ADB) that was lighter in weight, and thus more fuel efficient. As a result, we were left with the infamous GMC RTS. This design was rejected in Canada (and IMHO rightly so), and as a result fishbowl production continued until G.M. went out of the bus manufacturing business in 1986.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GM_New_Look
 

Latest posts

Back
Top