Old Eureka vacuum with beater bar brush roller
I have an old Eureka Model 1406 upright vacuum, the one that exactly imitates
the old Hoover models after their patent ran out. It's really powerful, and still works great, except that the brush roller is worn out. The original roller contains both brushes and beater bars. Apparently I can still get a replacement, but wondered if the vacuum might work better if the roller was all-brush, with no beater bars. This would be for fairly deep carpet. I guess I never understood exactly what the beater bar was supposed to do. Any opinions would be appreciated. |
Old Eureka vacuum with beater bar brush roller
On 12/26/2017 4:36 PM, Peabody wrote:
I have an old Eureka Model 1406 upright vacuum, the one that exactly imitates the old Hoover models after their patent ran out. It's really powerful, and still works great, except that the brush roller is worn out. The original roller contains both brushes and beater bars. Apparently I can still get a replacement, but wondered if the vacuum might work better if the roller was all-brush, with no beater bars. This would be for fairly deep carpet. I guess I never understood exactly what the beater bar was supposed to do. Any opinions would be appreciated. The beater bar pounds the carpet so the dust bounces out and gets sucked up into the vacuum. It does this without an additional electric motor and associated wires in the hose like the ones with powered brushes, IIRC. |
Old Eureka vacuum with beater bar brush roller
On Tuesday, December 26, 2017 at 6:36:45 PM UTC-6, Peabody wrote:
I have an old Eureka Model 1406 upright vacuum, the one that exactly imitates the old Hoover models after their patent ran out. It's really powerful, and still works great, except that the brush roller is worn out. The original roller contains both brushes and beater bars. Apparently I can still get a replacement, but wondered if the vacuum might work better if the roller was all-brush, with no beater bars. This would be for fairly deep carpet. I guess I never understood exactly what the beater bar was supposed to do. Any opinions would be appreciated. The alternating brush and metal strips were thought to do a better job of beating dust out of the carpet. They probably work better on deep pile residential carpet than on low pile commercial carpet where the backing might get damaged from the beating. The metal strips cause more vibration in the carpet that helps remove soil. Some are called disturbulators or vibra-groomers. |
Old Eureka vacuum with beater bar brush roller
Peabody posted for all of us...
I have an old Eureka Model 1406 upright vacuum, the one that exactly imitates the old Hoover models after their patent ran out. It's really powerful, and still works great, except that the brush roller is worn out. The original roller contains both brushes and beater bars. Apparently I can still get a replacement, but wondered if the vacuum might work better if the roller was all-brush, with no beater bars. This would be for fairly deep carpet. I guess I never understood exactly what the beater bar was supposed to do. Any opinions would be appreciated. Does the word *beater* gives you any clue. DAGS -- Tekkie |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:42 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter