Henry Vacuum Cleaner Repair

The hose on my vacuum cleaner is now fully dry and I just tested it and it works, no leaks, I vacuumed my entire house with it. Its pretty good.

When I see cheap vacuum cleaners dumped I normally just cut the cords off as the wire is very useful but if I see anymore Henry vacs, I'll be taking those for sure. Alls I need to find now is an industrial steam cleaner.
 
Last edited:
easy solution for unblocking the pipe,

take off the pipe


go to your bath, put the plug in bath


take your shower head off, to expose the pipe,


turn shower on

Jet of water will unblock your tube

take pipe outside hand upside down to dry

jobs a good'un
 
Why do you need to put the plug in the bath :confused:


Because...What is in the hoover pipe will end up going down your bath plug hole, then you will have a bigger problem


Alternativly, i guess an even better idea would be to get a bucket, and use your outdoor garden tap/hose with the pressure nozzle
 
Last edited:
You sure? Look at him. Phwoooaaar.

80679381-13027419-image-m-9_1706704989028.jpg
 
I worked as a manager of an electrical retailer in the 90s. I remember when Dyson first released the Upright cleaner, DC01 IIRC, we had almost as many back as we sold, as they broke down all the time. I guess they have got better but we too have a Henry now.
 
I've since found 2 more :)

I found another red Henry which had nothing wrong with it at all but somebody still threw it out and I found a pink Hetty vacuum cleaner which looked like it had the cord chewed off it so that just needed a new cord and I even found 1 pound and 25 pence inside the vacuum bag.

I want to find more now. A nice blue one will be a nice addition for the collection.
 
Hoover is a brand.

The Henry isn't a hoover, it's a vacuum cleaner.

Like saying you're eating a Burker King Big Mac.
Numatic is the brand there are various models .ie. Henry, Hetty, James, George etc all with slightly different usage. Or just a plain Numatic without the smiley face. Hoover is a brand as well a generic name, when I said to one of the higher ups in the company we need a new vac since she's foreign I thought I'd better use the proper term "vacuum cleaner" but she didn't understand what I was saying until she said "oh you mean a hoover". Okaaay then...
 
Last edited:
Numatic is the brand there are various models .ie. Henry, Hetty, George etc all with slightly different usage. Or just a plain Numatic without the smiley face

yeah I have a Henry +, comes with various heads, stainless steel tube, turbo brush etc.

The Numatics are the pro range, usually with longer cable, larger bin, possibly higher quality motor.
 
I was on a cruise ship and the cleaning crew had had Numatic, Henry coloured vacuum backpacks. I thought that was a good spot, never seen that before or since. See if you can find one of those!
 
I worked as a manager of an electrical retailer in the 90s. I remember when Dyson first released the Upright cleaner, DC01 IIRC, we had almost as many back as we sold, as they broke down all the time. I guess they have got better but we too have a Henry now.

Around 2002 I used to work in a garage and literally 2 mins down the road was the tip, one of the older guys at work was popping down there 3 times a day looking purely for... Dyson hoovers! I might be wrong but I'm sure that the only thing wrong with them all was some sort of clip.

15 years later I turned into him but I was looking for Bush, Murphy, JMB and Alba TV's that had a common fault with resistors failing.

It's amazing that Henry hoovers are still so popular today, most plasterers, electricians and gas fitters have a Henry on the van, you could even sell a broken Henry on eBay for £60 before the pandemic.
 
There excellent vacuum cleaners which last for decades. It seems to be common to find one that has been dumped because of a minor fault or even fully working. I am tempted to look for a tip to see if I can find more of them. There was a recycling center near me that had a huge pile of them. I'd love to find a 90s model, the older ones seem to have a more powerful motor. I'm building up nice collection of them now. You can find out what year they were made by the serial number.
 
Last edited:
There are some rare models like these three. The beige and brown ones are the early ones and go for quite a bit.

UH5eA8N.jpeg
czbpTie.jpeg
Mqlw27a.jpeg
 
Back
Top Bottom