What are The Chances of This..?

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vacu-finder

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 25, 2011
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330
Running the old kenmore canister today, as I was finishing off a room I turned off the machine via foot switch. As i looked back making a motion to unplug the cord it Mysteriously had 2 basic Knots in the cord.
What are the chances of this happening..? Maybe one knot but 2....:)

vacu-finder++7-25-2012-13-43-49.jpg
 
Seriously to put this in a perspective that we can relate to.

I don't think Kenmore ever made a machine using a fabric cord.....As a matter of fact did they ever manufacture a Vacuum with a fabric cord.?
 
I think we are looking at a braided nylon rope, not an electric cord. It's just too new looking to be a vintage cord such as one finds on older appliances as toasters, fans, coffee percolators, etc. It seems to me that it was domestic irons that featured the really pretty colors to match the trims in the 1950s until rubber sheathed cords became the norm.


 


None the less, Dean, the only way such knots would be produced would be during a particularly vigorous round of vacuuming that had the machine crossing and looping over it's cord coil that would then be teased into a knot as the vacuum was pulled to another room at the limit of reach before yanking the plug out of the wall socket - I've had that happen with Shop Vacs.


 


Dave
 
Yes toasters, irons i remember had the funky looking cords.
I don't recall the machine Dave reaching the end of it's stretch limit.

Like i said maybe one knot but 2. Wierder things have happened.
 
Some of our old 1970s appliances had cords - irons especially, sometimes kettles and toasters too. i recall my parents Sunbeam electric square griddle/fry pan had a fabric cord - it was a right bugger to clean because it kept getting oily whenever the appliance was used.
 
Yep over here in the UK irons were very commonly fitted with a fabric cord, if not always, reason being a rubber one would melt if you accidentally put the iron on it. Fabric would still be damaged, but not as rapidly.
 

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