Vacuum Cleaners Discussions |
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Trebor
Joined: Jan 16, 2009
Points: 321
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Vacuuming Oriental Rugs
Original Message Mar 12, 2009 11:14 am |
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Carmine, This will probably fall under your area of expertise and experience, but all are welcome to contribute. As I transition from being unemployed to being self-employed, I am looking for more specialized services to offer my clients. There are specialized 'rug dusters' for sale which tap the accumulated dirt, dust, sand, and grit out of Oriental rugs by laying them face down over a grid which gives the debris room to fall. These cost upwards of 4,000.00! These have been developed as an alternative to the huge stationary 240 volt dusting machines. All of this to replace regular vacuuming with a Hoover 300, 700, or 150, the ones with the dual divergent agitator bars, with shorter agitator bars and bristle strips in between on each side. The magic of the Hoover was that the 5,000 taps per minute during slow motion vacuuming set up a wave pattern that vibrated the rug, dislodging the dirt, sand, and grit. It was not accomplished with tremendous suction, though the airflow was good, it was the balance of enough suction to keep snapping the rug up after each tap. The sand was not actually beaten out of the rug as much as the rug was pushed down leaving the sand in mid-air to be caught by the airflow generated by the fan, as explained by the laws of Newtonian physics. My question is this: Short of finding and restoring a few 150 Hoovers, is there any alternative? Would any later model Hoovers accept the dual divergent agitator? How late? A current Guardsman, maybe, with some alteration perhaps? A Kirby with a cloth bag has been suggested to me. A G series will not accept a full-fledged sani-emptor, and probably is too powerful to sustain the tap/snap action. A cloth bag would yield too much airflow, and a hepa bag too little as it fills. A Heritage I with a cloth bag seems the only other possibility. The Sanitaire Vibra-Groomer I is not sufficient, about the same as the standard Hoover agitator with just one strip of beater bar per side. The idea of being able to restore neglected Oriental rugs with simple thorough vacuuming for good pay is very appealing. As I understand it, Hoover abandoned this configuration of agitator because as area rugs gave way to wal to wall carpet, it did not grab and hold the wall-to-wall carpet as well as the newer, less expensive to produce version, which had just the one spiral strip per side. Hoover could have ruled if they had stuck to being a status symbol. Imagine being able to switch out the roller and bottom plate to adapt the vacuum to whatever carpet/rug/floor needed to be cleaned. The mind boggles, while the Hoover just beats, as it sweeps, as it cleans... Trebor
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Venson
Joined: Jul 23, 2007
Points: 1900
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Re: Vacuuming Oriental Rugs
Reply #72 Mar 20, 2009 5:29 pm |
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The TTI canister is a near counterfeit, designed to deceive and siphon Miele’s sales. Although not an exact copy, it comes close to [design] patent infringement.<BR><BR>Society is much better off when companies choose to dig deep and bring exciting, fresh and problem solving ideas to market. Thus far this $3b monopoly is a miserable patent failure, their copying and taking others ideas (totals) far exceeds their patent and patent pending totals.<BR><BR><BR>DIB
Hi DIB, The $300 Hoover has a completely different power nozzle -- a Hoover original for years that does its job well. Hoover includes an mini-turbine tool that is not like Miele's and I would point out that Miels makes you pay $75.00 for its little turbo tool which is no better than Hoover's PLUS either one costs about $2.50 to make. I'd also humbly submit, that once you've actually looked over a Miele, a Bosch, an Emer, a Riccar/Simplicity and this Hoover canister you'll find you're looking at the same animal and will be hard pressed to tell who stole what from whom. Best, Venson
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DysonInventsBig
Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454
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Re: Vacuuming Oriental Rugs
Reply #74 Mar 20, 2009 6:03 pm |
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Hi DIB,
The $300 Hoover has a completely different power nozzle -- a Hoover original for years that does its job well. Hoover includes an mini-turbine tool that is not like Miele's and I would point out that Miels makes you pay $75.00 for its little turbo tool which is no better than Hoover's PLUS either one costs about $2.50 to make.
I'd also humbly submit, that once you've actually looked over a Miele, a Bosch, an Emer, a Riccar/Simplicity and this Hoover canister you'll find you're looking at the same animal and will be hard pressed to tell who stole what from whom.
Best,
Venson Lol. This is true! I would blow it off if this was the only vacuum look-a-like they have done, but they have a long history of taking what is not theirs (legal or otherwise). They should develop their own IP and take market share that way and not by counterfeiting. They do not limit themselves by only taking mechanical and design elements but taking marketing too... they are also “No Loss of Suction” counterfeiters. DIB
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DysonInventsBig
Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454
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Re: Vacuuming Oriental Rugs
Reply #76 Mar 20, 2009 9:14 pm |
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Venson, Society is far ahead when the creative are protected. With regards to the Miele design copy... There is zero mechanical gain buy wrapping the Hoover in a Miele design. It is to deceive and syphon Miele sales. Protecting what you made keeps innovation alive and betters society ultimately (including the creation of jobs). Shifting Miele money to China helps who exactly? Again, the product is a suction machine at its core and wrapped in Miele. I do not like Miele’s ways. I do not like gang bangers too, but if we look away when a gang banger steals from or destroys another gang banger it will eventually grow like cancer and then the innocent are harmed. So, I will defend Miele, Oreck and others when monopoly giants take their work. It is only a matter of time before Oreck is forced to close down all/near all U.S. assembly plants in order to compete with the Hoover Platinum Bag. And speaking of Platinum, did not Oreck come out with a Platinum about a year before Hoover launched their Platinum line? The pilfering goes on and on. Their ways are a caustic. I’d much rather see Miele profit and build innovative and stylish appliances than watch this knockoff company profit via pilfering and hurt the innovative/close the innovative down. The high price of low cost knockoff vacuums is something to consider. DIB
This message was modified Mar 20, 2009 by DysonInventsBig
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DysonInventsBig
Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454
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Re: Vacuuming Oriental Rugs
Reply #78 Mar 21, 2009 4:05 am |
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Re: Vacuuming Oriental Rugs
Reply #80 Mar 21, 2009 7:25 am |
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'Another pet peeve of mine.' - You have so many "pet peeves", Carmine, it's a wonder you ever get out of bed.
I hope you can sleep easier tonight, now I’ve graciously answered your good-natured concerns. No problem sleeping at night. 3 grand daughters less than a mile away tire me out daily. No problems waking in the morning either. A yellow lab with a cold nose and wet tongue works better than the alarm clock. More than pet peeves, the aches and pains of years of use and abuse make getting out of the bed difficult. Thank you kindly for your concerns.
Carmine D.
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Trebor
Joined: Jan 16, 2009
Points: 321
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Re: Vacuuming Oriental Rugs
Reply #81 Mar 21, 2009 7:46 pm |
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Hoover was not the first to copy Oreck, Panasonic/Kenmore Bissell dual fan, now offered as Tacony Powerflight and Tornado Good Housekeeper/ElectraPure Royal and Hoover with their commercial lightweights Simplicity and Riccar, which clean far better than Oreck, and are more properly identified as the vacuums Hoover copied with their Platinum lightweight bagged model, which by all accounts, presently rules the category. Trebor
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