What are your favorite Kirby models????

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561 manual

is the one depicted, and it was the same for the 560 as well. When the 560 came out it had a number of small aesthetic change and a slightly revamped instruction manual with a new cover. Contents were, as per Kirby, still pretty much the same.

Anyone ever noticed that on the "early-late" 500 series, e.g., the 516, 517 and maybe the 518, when you push the power switch the motor would not engage until you release the switch! Ditto for turning it off. You would press the button but the motor would not stop running until you left off the switch.

I always thought that was kinda neat but it apparently threw some people off because somewhere along the way, but before the 560, the switch was changed so that the power would come on as soon as you drepressed the switch, and ditto for turning it off.

Talking about this has just jostled loose yet another early Kirby memory! I have talked in the past about the large Baptist church where my mother was the organist, and how they had THREE Kirbys -- either 516s, 517s or 518s, I am not sure which now but I do recall they had the round red belt lifters.

The custodian's closet was a large room, the furthest end of which was under a stairwell. He kept the Kirbys lined up in a row in that sloping back corner with the handles tilted down at an angle.

Anyway, I suddenly had a vivid impression of the custodian standing on the carpeted aisle of the church getting ready to vacuum and him looking at me as he pressed the switch with his toe and making, you know, a sort of grand pause before releasing the switch by removing his toe and letting the machine start up!! I had TOTALLY forgotten about that until just now.

The custodian was kind of my pal. He was an older Black man, well probably in his 60s [not so "older" to me anymore, haha]; he was very tall and slim with gray hair. I'd always go run and "play" with him while my mama was practicing the organ. I remember one time him taking me into the sanctuary and showing me how he had buffed the hard tile floor under the pews. It was very shiny and beautiful.

I wonder how many other old memories are lodged in bad sectors on my internal hard drive!!
 
Another question....I hope you all do not mind.

Thank you Charles-Richard for clearing me up on the 560 book, you are a sweet and wonderful man.

I know this may be something I have not been clear on and would appreciate some help.

Our Kirby dealer here who has been selling Kirbys since 1950 and his father before him also sold them told me, that the 512, 513 had the first silver push-button switch, rather than the togle up and down one. These are usually the models you had seen them on. Clay F. introduced me to this Kirby dealer many years ago.

I have also been told that those were replacement switches, but I have actually seen them on a machine in a ownners manual book. There is only one picture of it inside the book but I do have the book.

I am wondering which is it? There has porbably been a debate on this one before. Sorry to bring up old topics..

Thank you,
David
 
I like my Tradition it’s probably my all time favorite, the blue color is the most regal looking of the bunch in my opinion. I’m also partial to the dual 80 and my Heritage 84 as well
 
Kirby switches

The switches from the very first Kirbys (other than the R series) including the very earliest Scott & Fezter Sanitation Systems and Vacuette Electrics all had the same switch -- a small metal toggle switch on the SIDE of the cord socket. You pressed the switch down to turn the motor on and push it up to turn it off.

This switch was changed on the 513. So your Kirby guy was close but off by one model. The 512 still had the toggle switch, and also still had all gray trim and the older style bag with the Kirby name in the ornate cursive logo and parallel stripes up and down the front of the bag.

The 513 was the first model to have what Kirby termed the "push-push" switch. It also had red rug nozzle trim and red houselight trim. It had a newly designed bag (see link) and a higher-speed motor.

I thought for many years that the 513 was also the first machine to have a red handle grip, the same shape as the earlier handle grips but now red. Clay Floyd has maintained that this is not the case, that the 513 still had a gray handle and the first red handle appeared on the 514 when the swivel cord release hook was introduced.

I am not entirely sure I am convinced of this yet, as I have seen so many 513s over the years with the red handle grip I described. (You can see photos of original and replacement grips on the 2nd page of my Kirby history site), but for now I'll defer to his knowledge since I am not 100% sure of this, basing what I say only on the numerous 513s I've seen. Anyone else want to weigh in on this topic? Fr Bruce??

One concession I have to give Clay is that he is old enough to remember when the 513 came out, and I am not ... hahaha! :)

Anyway, I =am= sure about the switch -- it was changed when the higher-power motor was introduced. (n.b. there is a difference in sound between the 513-515 and the earlier 500 series, and the 505 sounds different from all of them. I believe the 505 has the same motor as the C/R series, and that a different motor was introduced with the 508 [there was no 506 or 507]. Only stating this based on the fact that my 508 does not sound the same as my 505, but my 505 does sound like my Model C and 2C.

There were other little differences between the 512 and 513 also. Slight design details.



http://www.137.com/kirby/513_bag.jpg
 
picture of toggle switch?

If someone could please post a picture of an early Kirby with the toggle switch, I would really appreicate that. Switches are one of my favorite things, and I've never seen anyhing but the push button switch on Kirbys. Thanks!
 
picture of toggle switch?

If someone could please post a picture of an early Kirby with the toggle switch, I would really appreicate that. Switches are one of my favorite things, and I've never seen anyhing but the push button switch on Kirbys. Thanks!
 
Ask, and ye shall receive...

These are of the 512, but again, you will find the same switch on all the Kirbys from the very first Scott & Fetzer and Vacuette Electric up through the 512.

n.b. the early Health-Mor upright (straight suction only) had a very similar switch, except that the switch was a large slider on top of the switch housing!

1-9-2007-11-57-11--Charles~richard.jpg
 
wonderful

Thank you so much! I really enjoyed seeing that. I've always loved the deep press of the older Kirbys... and I think it's neat that they moved the switch from the side to the back. Was this just a style change? I think that toggle would be hard to manipulate. For some reason I always assumed that the early Kirbys had handle toggles like Royals... I'm so glad to be educated now :O) I did see that in your other post of the shiny Kirby on the gold shag, but I couldn't tell it was a switch... thought it was just a design! Thanks again :O)
 
Those are all very nice Kirbys.

I bought a Dual 50 today... had to drive about 140 miles round trip for it, but I think it was worth it... it came with the Handi-Butler, Rug Renovator, various sprays, floor polisher. It works well, just obviously needs cleaning and polishing.

(more pics in the "60's Kirby" thread)

1-29-2007-03-12-16--Sudsmaster.jpg
 
Great machines one and all

My favorite has to be the 500 series, because that's what my grandmother had when I was growing up. Could have been anything between a 516 and a 560, but I like to think it was a 519 for the year I was born.

On a related note, is it still possible to get a cord with the round plug for the pre-516 models? I have a nice 511 I'd like to find an original-styel cord for.
 

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