What Vacuum Did You Want

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briankirbyclass

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 29, 2008
Messages
716
Location
Eudora Kansas
Those of us who have been facinated with vacuums since childhood (which i think is most everyone here), which make/model(s) did you wish for (or want) the most? - that you didnt, or couldnt have. And, did you finally get to own one later in adulthood?
Id have to say all of the 1960s-70s Eurekas - Cannisters and Uprights,all of the 60s-70s Luxes,and any Central Vac.
Also the Rainbow was a very interesting machine to me as a kid,,as was the Filter Queen,,they all had such neat attachments.
Of course all of the Kirby models were facinating,and i was lucky to have a Grandma that had a DS50,,so i got to use it whenever i wanted to.
I remember when Electrolux came out with the 1205,, an Aunt bought one, and i just got there as the Lux dealer was just leaving the house,,so i got to use it when it was brand new.
Thought it was the greatest thing in the world,,a brand new 1205 right out of the box, not even used yet at all!
I remember how shiny it was.
I have either owned, or gotten to use(whenever i wanted to) most every make and model i wished for.
 
it's not vintage, or technically not a vacuum, but when I was younger I desperately wanted the red and black Dirt Devil Carpet Cleaner. I think it was one of there first ones. My parents wouldn't get it for me because they thought I would ruin the carpet by shampooing it to much.
 
The vacuum I most wanted as a child had to be a Hoover Concept Two. Although it was out of production at the time I also remember wanting a Singer Golden Power Master like my hair dresser had in her gameroom
 
I wanted that G. E canister.

As a kid I wanted several machines, like the General Electric canister pictured here, but the one I saw was the same shade of green without the chrome trim. I first saw it as an ad on tv. Another favorite was the G.E. Roll-Easy.

I have tried to acquire every brand and style that were used by the mothers, grandmothers, aunts and so on, of my friends. That was a tall order, but I got most of em. And, as I said last week, a major piece has been missing. The coveted Electrolux C-A! I'd actually stopped wishing for that one, but fate has blessed me again.

Alex Taber
 
That is awsome Alex! Im so glad you finally got one!
The small school i went to in Kindergarten had a late 1960s Lux CB,,,and the teacher would let me use it! I want to say it had a dark blue top. same color as a 1205?
It was kept in the janitor's closet next to the Kindergarten room (of course i knew where EVERY vacuum was kept wherever i went, and what kind it was!)
Evidently my mother had told the teacher before i started school that i was interested in vacuums,so, the first day of school,(after the rest of the kids went home) she let me go roll out the Lux CB, and use it. I remember it had a HUGE long floor brush,,and was fun to use.
I remember wishing it had the Power Nozzle, as it did have a plug in for it.
Sure was nice of that teacher to take the time to let some kid play with the vacuum,,i wonder how many teachers nowadays would stay after school to do that?
I remember she was a very sweet,patient and kind person.
Aahhh memories.
 
great question.
I always wanted a Hoover Convertible, especially the metal based rounded hood like the 65, 66, ETC. They were everywhere in my town and this was in the 80's. The new vacuums were Concepts and of coarse they were everywhere too. I finally got my first Convertible in the late 90's ( a 69) it was my sisters and she stopped useing it because my brother in law got her a newer " metal" convertible with the full hood, model U4109, it was one of the last metal ones. He picked it up from a yard sale. Anyhow I used it for a while then traded it in for a new vacuum at a vac shop and kicked myself ever since.
I now have almost every model of metal based convertible out there and yes one of them is a close to MINT 69, thanks to all our members in St. Louis Rick,Marty,John ETC.
Now the one vacuum I HATED was KIRBY!!! I love them now though and have about 25 of them.
 
I was fascinated by my aunt's vac - a Eureka Golden Crown rotomatic as well as the chrome dome Rainbow that a few of my mom's friends owned. My mom had a FQ and at the time I didn't like it at all. I always wished that she would have something nicer LOL I do have a FQ now, as well as the chrome dome and a blue/white rotomatic but haven't been able to find the elusive Golden Crown.

Gary
 
the childhood vac I wanted was a fantom furry and when I was six I got one for xmas but resently the machine has broken down and parts are not avalible so my new favorite bagless vac is my cms 1000 and in 2nd grade through 4th grade my teacher or teachers would let me bring a vacuum after school and vacuum the classroom I even remember fixing my 3rd grade teachers vac and my counsulars vac
 
As a child I always wanted a Electrolux XXX around 12 I finally got one. My next most wanted was a GE Roll Easy.
 
My dream vac as a kid...

was the Eureka Empress with the white tool box and the white version of the classic Eureka woven hose. The print ad I saw made it look so modern and cool (see link below - scroll down to the bottom of the linked ebay page to see the ad - ignore the message that says the item is no longer available).

Then they came out with the Empress II, and the magical TV commercial for these vacs made me want to have one too! The voice-over on the commercial had a woman whispering over and over again: "Empress two......Empress two....."

http://cgi.ebay.com/1965-Ad-Eureka-...temQQimsxZ20090804?IMSfp=TL090804175006r16087
 
As an eBay Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
I Guess You Want What You Don't Have

My Mom had that exact green GE Swivel-Top. They bought it at the local hardware store. They knew I was crazy about vacuums and left me out of the decision. The machine I was always fascinated with and could never get my hands on was the Lux Model G. One our way to Sears at the local mall one day in the late 60's, we passed a storefront that had been leased by Electrolux. The only thing in the room were two Model Gs. I'll never forget it. Have never seen an Electrolux store in a mall. Still one of my favorite machines and in my humble opinion, one of the best vacuums ever made.

11-11-2009-08-26-29--compactelectra.jpg
 
Canadian Electrolux models 83, 86, 87, 88, and 89 always drew me like a magnet (and still do). I have all of them except the 83 and 87. Even today, I can stare at those machines until my eyes almost pop out of my head.

The Model G, on the other hand, became an adult "most wanted vacuum" when I discovered this forum. I had never seen one until that point, and I just had to have one. Luckily, I have the turquoise and tan versions now...just waiting on the Hospital G models to show up sometime.
 
My Story...

My parents Jack and Mary-Lou came from opposite sides of the tracks - Dad was a Canadian National Railroad labourer's son and Mom came from the best part of town, a Doctor's Daughter. From when I can remember about 6-7 years of age, visits to both sets of Grandparents and Aunts & Uncles introduced me to several vacuum appliances fascinating to me, the budding Tinker-tot.

On the paternal side, Gramma Kerr used a Bissel-type manual Carpet Sweeper, broom and dustpan daily and would run her Electrolux 'Loaf' on full-tilt Cleaning Day in her small house and later the tiny one bedroom 2nd floor-of-a-house efficiency apartment with Grampa. Don't know if it was a model 30x or 50x but I do remember the lovely silver-ish Alligator hide pattern...and it was so quiet!

Grandmother Sheafe, on the other hand, always had a fully tricked out Filter Queen and she used all the accessories (when she didn't have the cleaning girl/maid Mary using it) As she aged she always had a Filter Queen to the day she died at 89. It wasn't as quiet but it too had a soothing powerful sound. Grandmother Scheafe was an early widow (in a very grand 4 story Victorian Mansionhouse downtown across from the City Park. Grandfather had left her a wealthy owner of many properties in London Ontario. She had 3 sons and 3 daughters and my Mom was the youngest by 9 years. Grandmother turned the 2nd and third floors into self-contained 3 bedroom apartments sometime in the early 1950s (the size of most one story houses). W lived on the second floor, with Uncle Harry and Aunt Bernice and their two kids Craig and Liz on the 3rd. We all moved from there when I was 7-8 years old, into actual houses Gram owned throughout the city and thus our middle class lives continued. Before I was born I just don't know what Grandmother had and my Mom doesn't recall, since when she was growing up there were servants/staff to do all that.

As I recall, Mom and Aunt Bern would lug Grandmother's Filter Queen up the stairs for their cleaning days. There was no more house staff other than Grandmother's Mary (who's last name actually was Martin...Mary Martin) who lived with her as a Lady's Companion long after Grandmother moved and until her death. We brought the Filter Queen with us when we moved to Cathcart Street in South London. Uncle Harry had started a big successful Furniture Store so he & Aunt Bern moved out to the new schmantzy ranch house suburbs in Byron Village beside Springbank Park and they bought a GE Swiveltop.

My Dad's brother Uncle Wynne was a wavy haired handsome go-getter who married stunning statuesque red-headed vivacious Carol. Wynne worked for GM Chevrolet and always drove the flashiest models. They had twin daughters and a son and lived the very modern Cocktail Life. Aunt Carol always reminded me of Laura Petrie with red hair, in her pedal pusher capri pants or stunning fashion dresses tooling around town in the various Chevy Impalas - always a two car family. She had a Hoover Constellation and boy oh boy, I loved that vacuum. I thought Aunt carol was the most beautiful woman in the world...until I fell in love with my grade 2 teacher, Miss Sims. That adoration was replaced by my grade 6&7 teacher MR Reaume. But I digress...

Meanwhile back home, Dad bought Mom a new vacuum cleaner - the green Electrolux 89 with all the bells and whistles and this is the one I remember best.

I wrote about this very vacuum last Christmastime, I think, when after all these years it turned out my brother had it after Dad used it in his workshop and kept it going with his own creative parts transplants. Now I have it, along with examples of every vacuum I can recall relatives using as I grew up.

Oh, I wanted them ALL!! :-)

Today both my sister Nancy and brother Jim have one vacuum for their homes and both are new Electroluxs - Renaissance-style. Not sure what Mom is using now in her 3 bedroom high-rise apartment - I must check that out this holidaytime.

Mam's ZB89 with Dad's hybrid modifications:

11-11-2009-11-26-7--aeoliandave.jpg
 
The asstute observer will obviously notice that there were problems with the cordwinder and hose at some point after Mom ceased using it and got her new one in the 80s. She thought Dad tossed the 89 out but he took it out to the Dad Zone workshop...where Mom never went. Dad's solution was to transplant a red cordwinder from a ZB 86 with a gray replacement cord, and got his hands on an Electrolux replacement hose at some vacuum shop and knowing Dad it was a used and probably free bargain at the time. Jim found the vacuum after dad died and took it home to his basement workshop.

A few interesting things about this hybrid hose Dad concocted...first off it is the beige weave pattern hose from the Canadian Electrolux AP series that followed the 80 series. The replacement hose's ball-bearing coupler was molded in beige so only fits ZB80 and Loaf series Canadian vacuums. Even tho is has the molded box for the electric pigtail this hose has no electric fittings and would have required an exterior cord wrap. Similarly, the intended electric AP hose has a larger brass ferrule that fits inside the AP series electric handle end that has no exterior cord socket, as it took its power feed from the hose coils, so a smaller diameter green 80 series microswitch handle will not fit. By this time Electrolux had abandoned the microswitch handle that came with the green 89. Though the handle molds are the otherwise the same the power strip insert contains no switch and no socket for an exterior wrapped extension cord.

But Dad Jack was a clever fellow. He took the microswitch assembly strip with the exterior pigtail socket from the 89 and fitted it to the AP series handgrip, creating a two tone one-of-a-kind hose for the 89 that operates the late 89 Power Nozzle as intended - with finger pressure on the switch paddle.

When the hose got too leaky Dad artistically wrapped the hose in red plastic bag material from Tuckey's Hardware Store, to match the red cordwinder. Then he spiral wound the long cord snugly eliminating all those fussy rubber cord straps in favour of just one pale green clip at each end.

In short, it's an AP100 style non-electric hose Factory replacement for an 89, cleverly modified by my father. A thing of pure beauty, I tell ya...

Brother Jim tells me that Dad called this vacuum The Baboon because of it's red rump. It runs extremely well with full suction and having cleaned it up and marveling over Dad's ingenuity I decided to keep it just as it is. I have more than enough green 87s and 89s with powerhoses.

I'd have to say that this will understandably always be my all time favorite vacuum no matter how large and diversified my collection is and evolves.

Dave

11-11-2009-12-07-25--aeoliandave.jpg
 
Wow, what a fun thread! Man i would have LOVED to have had a Lux like that when i was a kid, Dave!
Funny story - Compactelectra, i know exactly how you felt when your parents didnt include you in the new vacuum buying process!,,this is sore subject between my parents and i, even today,almost 40 yrs later. (i dont bring it up to them anymore)
My parents had a new home built when i was 7,with wall to wall thick sculptured carpet of course, so naturally that called for a new vacuum!
All we had at the time was a dumb old Connie,,which i HATED!
Compared to a Lux Model G or 1205,new FQ,or Central Vac,,i was embarrassed of that old Connie!
I was praying every night that they would have Central Vac installed(which they should have, as it adds value to the home), but instead, Mom took it upon herself to actually go and buy a Hoover DAM Powerdrive,,WITHOUT ME! Can you imagine the nerve!
( she insisted i had to take swimming lessons, and thats where i was when she went to buy the new vac.) I remember being VERY hurt when i came home to find what she had done.- the ULTIMATE betrayal,,,by ones own mother yet! HUMPF!

Whats funny is,,the last time i brought up the subject to her, Mom (now in her mid 60s) clinched her teeth. HAHA,,isnt it funny that left as much of an impression on me, as it did her.
How could she have done that,(buying a new vacuum without me being there) KNOWING how much i liked vacuums! Oh well, such is life. I still say my arguement is valid. HAHA

I did get the last word on the subject tho, about 10 years later,,after the fact had been established that I was doing most of the vacuuming by then anyway, i took that DAM and traded it for a used Rainbow D2, with PN. Loved it!! Even bought the new larger 4qt. water pan! Boy, i put alot of miles on that old D2.
When i got sick of the D2, i traded it for a Kirby Classic 3, with ALL the attachments,,even the Handi Butler, and Saber Saw.
Which i eventually sold for much more than i paid for it.

Hey, maybe Mom buying that DAM wasnt such a bad deal afterall.
And, turns out, learning to swim at a young age wasnt such a bad deal later in life either.
 
I was also transfixed by wringer washers, stand mixera, sewing machines, typewriters and...floor polishers - anything mechanical with moving parts, really.

It seems now whenever I find a singular example of some neat thing out of the woodwork comes more clamouring for attention and adoption.

Saw these wto at the ReStore today. Which one shall I bring home?

11-12-2009-19-09-14--aeoliandave.jpg
 

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