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VacHunter Gallery - Bellows
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This gallery features bellows operated vacuums. They appeared
in several styles and shapes. Some early vacuums utilized a single
bellows. This made the cleaner less efficient because there was no suction
as the bellows closed. Suction was produced only as air rushed into
the bellows as it opened. To make the machines more useful, bellows
were installed in pairs and offset to allow one to open while the other closed.
Some machines were mounted on a board and operated by a tiller handle.
Some machines incorporated bellows power in a plunger style body. Still
others used hand-turned wheels to set the bellows into motion. The
most common bellows machine looked like a carpet sweeper, but had no rotating
brush. Rear mounted wheels provided the power to a crank shaft that
propelled push rods connected to sets of bellows. It was typical for
these machines to have either two or three bellows synchronized to produce
continuous suction.
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