Vintage Hoover Junior Compact vacuum cleaner U2210

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Its an electricity board special

As I have observed on other threads, Hoover produced a wide variety of special models for electricity boards and others, and one of the most common from the late 1970s was the use of headlights on cleaners after they had been dropped from the mainstream models which, if I am not mistaken in the Junior line, was the 1016. After adopting the flat belt and pan converter for tools on Juniors there were no more headlights on the mainstream lines. There was also a soft bag version of this cleaner too
Al
 
@joe22
What that means, is that these variations are sold exclusively to the Electricity Board chain.

A similar case of this is any Royal all-metal uprights and canisters branded by Stark, thus exclusively being sold by Stark's Vacuum of Portland, OR.

~Ben
 
U2210

The U2210 Compact has been quite a popular machine over the years and as other members say, was sold exclusively through Electricity Board showrooms to the best of my knowledge, along with the soft-bag equivalent model U1108 and the earlier version, model U2132(hard-bag with light). Also, there was the original U2128 High Power Compact, the U1036 Junior softbag (without light) and the U1040 softbag (with light). The U1206 was the soft-bag model with light sold in Co-Op stores. There was also the even earlier model U1034 Dirtsearcher, which was an Electricity Board Exclusive soft-bag machine. This is the only one on the above list, which uses round (as opposed to flat) belts.

BTW, the U1036 and U2128 were not Exclusives.
 
Electricity Boards

To be accurate I should have said Electricity Board Shops. Although there began to be standardisation in the UK power from the mid 1920s, it was 1947 when the electricity supply and distribution was nationalised and administered by 15 regional area boards. These operated their own chains of shops which served the dual purpose of paying bills, arranging new supplies etc. but also as showrooms for the rapidly growing market for electrical appliances. Often demonstrations were arranged and their were trained advisers to guide shoppers in which were the best appliances for their needs. It was also possible to purchase items on Hire Purchase ("on time") with the instalments added to the quarterly electricity bill.

From the 1960s they also ran their "own brand" products which were often indistinguishable from manufacturer's main line products - for example for vacuum cleaners Goblin were the major supplier. Initially these were sold under the regional board name (ManWeb, Seeboard, two examples) but later under the standard "Electra" label. In the 1970s these were discontinued with other manufacturers providing variations of their main models but this time under their own brand name - hence the Hoover exclusives mentioned previously.

Already under pressure from discount stores by the late 1980s, the privatisation of electricity supply again and the growing popularity of direct debit payments and monthly "budget" accounts (hence no need to go into a shop to pay the bill) saw these shops quickly close down, until they are now just a memory.

Al
 

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