Thread Number: 40992  /  Tag: 80s/90s Vacuum Cleaners
What will damage a Kirby lexan fan ?
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Post# 435279   11/20/2020 at 13:14 (1,245 days old) by Zenith12 (Canfield Ohio )        

What will damage a Kirby fan the gray plastic ones not the white ones? Am I right are the gray fans made from lexan I know that the white ones are cevlar .

Post# 435280 , Reply# 1   11/20/2020 at 13:43 (1,245 days old) by sanitaire (anchorage, alaska)        

usually coins or items that don't fit between the blades.. not a lot of clearance.. it's built for maximum air flow....

Post# 435282 , Reply# 2   11/20/2020 at 14:27 (1,245 days old) by KirbyClassicIII (Milwaukie, Oregon)        
Zenith12

kirbyclassiciii's profile picture
Mark,

Other things that could damage a gray plastic fan would be running the cleaner with the inflator/deflator attached to the hose (when attached to the front) to deflate things beyond five minutes, since that would cause the motor to overheat thus warping the fan blades.

~Ben


Post# 435283 , Reply# 3   11/20/2020 at 15:12 (1,245 days old) by vacuumkid47 (Sibley, IA)        

vacuumkid47's profile picture
As far as what Ben says, the only thing I know is that you cannot use the Crystalator for older machines. The crystals essentially eat away the Lexon fan.

Post# 435284 , Reply# 4   11/20/2020 at 15:35 (1,245 days old) by Hoover300 (Kentucky)        

hoover300's profile picture
Honestly, whenever I see a lexan fan in a machine I put in a kevlar fan no matter condition. I know texaskirbyguy has had a few explode while running!

Post# 435287 , Reply# 5   11/20/2020 at 16:38 (1,245 days old) by Blackheart (North Dakota)        
Whoa whoa whoa

blackheart's profile picture
The white fans are Amodel not Kevlar.

Post# 435289 , Reply# 6   11/20/2020 at 16:39 (1,245 days old) by Lesinutah (Utah)        
Ya

lesinutah's profile picture
The lexan fan was in kirby's 30 years ago. If you had a good condition lexan fan you would be fine under normal circumstances.
I know Rob had some blow up but like I said they were put in 30 years ago.
They can't withstand heat as well as amodel or kevlar fans. I'd just spend $10 and switch it out.
I have a kirby american lincoln super sweep. I took it apart and replaced it even though the original was in pristine condition.
If you replace you won't have to again.


Post# 435293 , Reply# 7   11/20/2020 at 20:26 (1,245 days old) by KirbyClassicIII (Milwaukie, Oregon)        
vacuumkid47

kirbyclassiciii's profile picture
Logan,

Yes, that too (about discouraging the use of the paradichlorobenzene crystals with the Crystalator).

~Ben


Post# 435363 , Reply# 8   11/23/2020 at 13:03 (1,242 days old) by texaskirbyguy (Plano, TX)        
What will damage a Kirby lexan fan?

Age.

This particular plastic deteriorates from age, becomes brittle, and looses its strength. Regular use of the vacuum will cause the fan to start coming apart on its own. Picking up any hard debris may cause additional breakage or catastrophic failure to them at any time.

Normally you will first see tiny hairline cracks at the insides of the blades near the hub. They will get bigger over time.
In most cases, the cracks will grow gradually until centrifugal force will cause parts of the fan to bend and stretch until the plastic contacts the fan case, which when running, resulting in a bad noise and the smell of burning plastic (from plastic-metal friction). At that point do not use the machine until it is fixed.
After then the fan may eventually explode or come apart in a way that the motor is bogged down or eventually stalls, both causing motor damage if not switched off immediately.
I was given a free Legend II where the latter occurred. The idiot user kept trying to vacuum with a locked motor and burned it up completely. The smell was horrendous. I did not keep that machine due to the smell.

There are also times where the fan looks okay at a glance, the vacuum works fine, and then - SNAP!!! It just explodes. I caught one of those on camera last year when testing the loads of machines from the closed Plano shop. It sounded fine, then it blew. The emtor was not attached and pieces of the fan were found throughout the back yard for the next several months, some as far as 40 feet from the vacuum was.
If the emtor and bag is attached, they will safely catch the fragments.

Moral of the story is to replace any grey fans with either white plastic ones or metal ones. I have not seen age affect either of these, but the metal ones could break if a large enough hard object is ingested.



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