Vacuum Cleaners Discussions |
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Re: Carpet shampooers
Reply #16 Jan 30, 2010 11:16 am |
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Hi Severus,
This is so funny. Devices similar were nearly bread-and-butter items for Hoover from the '50s on through the'70s. Similar items were also sold by Eureka, Sears, General Electric, Kenmore and Shetland. A two brush model with no dipenser tank as shown here ran for thirty to forty bucks.
Venson
Severus and Venson:
I have a 2 brush HOOVER 5130 from the late 50's/early 60's. I still use it. Works well. All still original. Certainly easily usable with one hand as the ad says about the new model posted that copies it. In fairness to the double handle Lux 3 brush, it is easily usable with one hand too. I like both machines and would probably sell both if I had a store and there was a demand by customers for waxers/polishers and shampooers. While I carried and sold the HOOVER 2 brushes for many years, when customers wanted a 3 brush I would refer to a Lux rep for sale. Not that big a demand, especially for home use at the price. Carmine D.
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budmattingly
Location: Middletown Ohio
Joined: Feb 8, 2008
Points: 60
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Re: Carpet shampooers
Reply #20 Dec 26, 2010 7:41 am |
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I would go with the Aerus/Lux Shampooer's. Easy to use, splash guard is wonderful for keeping suds off of woodwork and furniture that you are not moving. Tray to set it in, this tray also keeps the brushs up so the brushes won't get smashed down. I was disappointed when they did away with the cord winder, but you get a much longer cord in the trade off. I used mine a few months ago, mine has the cord winder and I used a heavy duty extention cord due to the short cord. Ease of cleanup is a breeze. In the past I have used hoovers, rug doctor, blue lustre and none compare. On top of that they have a dry suds Turbo Shampoo that is absolutely wonderful. The tank has water marks and you add a capfull per line and by capfull I mean the tank cap itself, how much easier than that...... One more thing, the shape is unique and allows you to get into tight corners and around things more easily. As we get older, there are some items that cannot be moved easily and as long as you are careful and keep a micro fibre cloth with you and wipe the legs if any shampoo happens to get on them, problem solved. I have jewel tone carpets and shampoo once or twice a year. The shampoo also brings back the brightness to those jewel tones. PS, almost forgot, cleanup is a breeze, after shampooing. Procare knows way more than I do about this and as he said, you may want to pm him. Sincerely, Bud
This message was modified Dec 26, 2010 by budmattingly
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Re: Carpet shampooers
Reply #21 Dec 26, 2010 8:47 pm |
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I would go with the Aerus/Lux Shampooer's. Easy to use, splash guard is wonderful for keeping suds off of woodwork and furniture that you are not moving. Tray to set it in, this tray also keeps the brushs up so the brushes won't get smashed down. I was disappointed when they did away with the cord winder, but you get a much longer cord in the trade off. I used mine a few months ago, mine has the cord winder and I used a heavy duty extention cord due to the short cord. Ease of cleanup is a breeze. In the past I have used hoovers, rug doctor, blue lustre and none compare. On top of that they have a dry suds Turbo Shampoo that is absolutely wonderful. The tank has water marks and you add a capfull per line and by capfull I mean the tank cap itself, how much easier than that...... One more thing, the shape is unique and allows you to get into tight corners and around things more easily. As we get older, there are some items that cannot be moved easily and as long as you are careful and keep a micro fibre cloth with you and wipe the legs if any shampoo happens to get on them, problem solved. I have jewel tone carpets and shampoo once or twice a year. The shampoo also brings back the brightness to those jewel tones. PS, almost forgot, cleanup is a breeze, after shampooing. Procare knows way more than I do about this and as he said, you may want to pm him. Sincerely, Bud Agree as written. I would add for the furniture legs this suggestion. Tip/tilt the furniture piece and place a a small square of folded aluminum foil under the leg before shampooing. Allow a small amount of surplus foil that you can use to wrap around the bottom of the leg's foot. Especially if the furniture piece is heavy and sinks into the rug. Then remove the foil when the rug is dry.
Carmine D.
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Severus
If my vacuum can remove even one spec of dirt that yours misses, then mine is better than yours - even if there's no proof that mine would have picked up as much dirt as yours...
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 397
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Re: Carpet shampooers
Reply #22 Dec 28, 2010 3:01 pm |
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Here is a link to an article comparing different types of carpet cleaning. It is somewhat biased towards hot water extraction, since that is the method recommended by Shaw and other major carpet manufacturers. http://www.baneclene.com/articles/methods.html A while back it was noted that Riccar was getting into the carpet cleaner business with a hot water extraction system similar to the Rug Doctor. Any news on this? As previously noted, Bissell has expanded into the rental business with Big Green Cleaning machines at Lowes. It's my understanding that anything other than hot water extraction methods would void the warranty on my carpeting.
The smart tyrant writes his own story to ensure that it is favorable. The lazy will repeat lines from the book without fact checking.
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CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
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Re: Carpet shampooers
Reply #24 Dec 28, 2010 6:26 pm |
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Here is a link to an article comparing different types of carpet cleaning. It is somewhat biased towards hot water extraction, since that is the method recommended by Shaw and other major carpet manufacturers. http://www.baneclene.com/articles/methods.html A while back it was noted that Riccar was getting into the carpet cleaner business with a hot water extraction system similar to the Rug Doctor. Any news on this? As previously noted, Bissell has expanded into the rental business with Big Green Cleaning machines at Lowes. It's my understanding that anything other than hot water extraction methods would void the warranty on my carpeting. Hello SEVERUS:
Merry Christmas. Here's a link that may interest you on RICCAR: http://www.nybakke.com/capture.htm Carmine D.
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