vintage Whirlpool Vacuum on eBay

VacuumLand – Vintage & Modern Vacuum Enthusiasts

Help Support VacuumLand:

i saw a u4085 bicentenntial convertible (wasnt even NIB, but just in the box) sell for $5600 in 2018. unfortunately there are a few rich closet collectors who take all the nice toys.
 
Yeah someone here mentioned that before - I think it might have been Tom? There is 1 or 2 collectors that are in a high income bracket job and they buy vacuums for insane prices, hoard them away, and then you never see that vacuum ever again.

I will say this much - if you look hard enough you can find rare vacuums for cheap when you know what you're doing. I bought a United Way Electrolux Model G from a seller in a town of only 150 people and it only cost me $50 w/ shipping incl. I also got a Oreck Radio Vac for only $90 a couple years ago - I love that vacuum to death!
 
There is a label on this Whirlpool that says it was distributed by the Oreck company. Did this relationship have something to do with Oreck buying the rights to that early Whirlpool upright design?
 
Never mind…found the answer: David Oreck was working for RCA at the time, and he created his company when he or RCA Whirlpool bought the North American rights to the design for a lightweight upright from McDonald Electric in Hannover, West Germany. Not sure exactly what the corporate relationship was between the three companies: McDonald Electric, RCA Whirlpool and Oreck.
 
RCA Whirlpool wanted to shut down the vacuum division

This occurred after the limited success of Whirlpool’s CVR uprights, which were essentially a Kenmore PowerMate nozzle fitted with a fan blade for airflow. This is when David Oreck got his company off the ground and began selling the German made Orecks, predecessors of the “8 pound hotel upright”..
 
You'll note that was the 'old' power nozzle design as well as 'old' canister design. Sears was NOT about having Whirlpool sell power nozzle canisters if they could at all help it. Sears was selling every PowerMate canister they could obtain at that point in the 1960's.

Wouldn't it be nice if that vacuum were on display and the general public and collectors could plug it in, turn it on, and see what it would have been like to own one of them? It would. But that's NOT what's going to happen to that machine. It will never see the light of day again.

Thanks to my friend Alex B., I at least can use the power nozzle with a machine that would have had the same motor as the Whirlpool.

dysonman1-2022081609231008566_1.jpg
 
John

The Whirlpool from eBay was the Lady Kenmore in a different color. My husband thinks it's heavy to push. And, it is.

The Whirlpool has a cracked hose connector on the front of the machine. Sliced pig-tail cord. And worn brush roll. I have a brand new brush roller for that power nozzle in my stock of NOS brushes. Wonder how the bearings sound on that $3049.00 Whirlpool? We'll never know. Off to the silo it goes.

dysonman1-2022081610434204544_1.jpg
 
I guess Sears wasn't going to give up all the things that made it a "Lady" Kenmore.
The direct connect hose and pistol grip handle. The full bag indicator and two-speed switch were on the front for ease of use. The extra wands stored under the machine. All the tools rode along. It even used a much different bag/bag change set up than the Whirlpool.

The Theme for the Vacuum Cleaner Collectors Convention next month is Power Nozzle Canisters. My favorite kind of vacuum.

dysonman1-2022081611025100574_1.jpg
 
CELOC

I remember seeing the 1990s orange Oreck canister called the "Celoc" (pronounced see-lock?) and didn't Oreck also use that word to describe the filter bags on the uprights?

Interesting to see that it originated with Whirlpool. Anyone know what it meant? Was it an acronym?

Amazing to see what this one sold for. I bet the seller was very happy!
 
Thanks for that information Luxlife.

I'm so curious as to who was first with the design: Whirlpool in the USA or McDonald Electric in West Germany? And what is the year that this design made its debut? It looks like one company copied the configuration from the other....but which one originated the concept and when?

I ask this because I actually love my Hoover Platinum Lightweight upright...it actually performs as well as much heavier uprights. The concept is also very simple -and makes a great "carpets only" companion cleaner to a suction only canister.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top