Generally working on a vacuum sucks. But you really made repairing it a clean sweep... You don't just don't have a brush with success, you embrace it! That's really calling all the naysayers onto the carpet. Good job. 100 points awarded. Cheers from So.Ca.USA 3rd house on the left.
SEBO - used by hotels everywhere! My friend went to the trouble of looking at the vacuums used in hotels to see what brands they use, as she wanted the best most reliable machine. It's Sebo! Great fix, very interesting about where the break occurred, Thanks Vince! All the best
I work on an awful lot of Sebo vacuums. Most common thing I change is cables as a lot of them I service are used in care homes, where cleaners are a bit rough on them. Very solidly built machines though, and stupidly simple to tear down and work on.
Great video. I had the exact same problem. I'm a massive SEBO fan they are just so good and no taking it to bits to vacuum the edges just pull out the wand!!
Great fix. Many products fail where the power cable enters, is regularly twisted, gets warm or gets run over by a suitcase. Given the cleaner's age (the device, not your wife), you may want to think about replacing the entire cable. My wife was using it, touched the previous Vince Sellotape repair and boom, my wife stopped working. Slightly burned carpet sample taken to Harrods.
Good catch. When I search for broken wires I grab the end then give a nice steady pull force, the wire insulation will usually get thinner (hourglass) right over the break, I just cu back a few inches from that to get non stresses wire to work from.
Oh and it's pronounced seee bow Great repair Vince! I've had many sebos ans this fault has occurred before but generally these are fantastic reliable quality German cleaners - they are the only company I know that their cleaners look so old fashioned but are so bang up to date at the same time - their latest one - the cordless bp60 is nearly 1000 pounds - your into kirby territory there!
This seems to be a common fault with Sebo vacuums. My mum's Sebo started to be problematic and it was an almost identical fault (literally when I saw your video it was 'I bet it's cable failure' and indeed it was). I ended up cutting 30cm off the cable and reterminating it into the handle. In my mum's vac there was a clear way to disassemble the handle (very similar to yours) so I could loop the cables back into the switch using the strain relief. I also thankfully had some cable crimps to terminate the end.
Yes, it's happened to a few BS36's at work and I am very careful to not strain the cable where it enters the machine as it ends up wearing the cable away. We have some Ensign badged SEBO's where the cable is a plugged type (two pin "kettle" style) directly into the motorhead. As for Axminster carpet, my Gran was once taken out for the day by her cousin only to find on returning the carpet in the lounge/dining room replaced with a lovely Axminster carpet, what was quite interesting is Axminster was only about 30-45mins from where she lived, so it was a local product!
I fixed a similar fault on a 30-year old Vorwerk Tiger 251 (I think Sebo was founded in the 80s by some engineers who worked for Vorwerk before). The power leads which go through the inside of the hose were severed where they come out through the hose wall and lead to the on-off switch on the handle. Luckily I could solder them together again and put some shrink tubing on it. Was a nice success to be able to take it apart there as these (way overpriced) products were properly designed to be repairable. You can still find after-market replacements parts for these old models.
I think you're right about where the cable snapped (i was actually writing a comment as you mentioned it) and also, probably haven't lost any "pratical" cable due to it not being restrained by the cable ties as previously
Many thanks for sharing this video. Saved me a shed load of time when ours did exactly the same thing. Only disaster was the line break was at the plug, which meant I had chopped up a lot of wire before I found the break. Wife less than impressed with 3 inch lead she was left with…….😂
you probably found out already, but you 1.remove screw. 2. slacken feed wires, 3. pull handle out of aluminum tube, and pry freshly exposed portion of handle backwards apart. (I've worked on Winsdor/Karcher versions of these vacuums for 19 years. LOVE THEM, ...industrial durable.
The "crimps" on the end of the fine stranded wires are called boot lace ferrules. Quite important when using screw terminals with fine stranded wire as when you tighten the screws down in the terminals this causes the fine strands to splay apart reducing the contact area with the terminal thus reducing the current carrying capacity. The ferrule also protects the conductor from damage when the screw it tightened down. Pretty sure Vince that the cable strain relief was the beige piece of plastic with two screws either side much like what you find in a British plug. Hard to tell as the video was sped up but I cannot see the Germans not incorporating a strain relief into the handle as the cable is going to get pulled on during use.
Ferrules simplify assembly, that's it. You can't really screw up (geddit lol) a ferrule connection while you'd be here all day listing how stranded goes wrong (no twisting or bending into hooks, whiskers hanging out, damage from the screw, etc). As someone who has also spent years doing stranded connections, I like ferrules.
@@TD75 In Europe we class conductor sizes, the conductor class of the cable in this video would be class 5 which would need a ferrule which is why the manufacturer install one. You can see how conductors are classed in Europe in this video. ua-cam.com/video/wX-NYCEfVlk/v-deo.html You can also see why ferrules are used in this video here which is pretty much what I said in my original comment about damage to the conductor & reducing the current carry capacity of the cable. Stray whiskers are also another reason. ua-cam.com/video/bJk0mzaATI4/v-deo.html
@@TD75 The factory making the power cables can knock them out with ferrules no worries, same as they do for any wiring harness that has blade connectors, Molex etc. The dudes assembling the vacuum just need to poke them into the holes, use push fitting and you can even skip the screwdriver. Minimal training, fast, very few failures compared to stranded. It's just money, not "this is better than that." The ferrules I use crimp square so you get a good connection with the screw or whatever. Good for rework or repair as you don't stuff up the stripped copper getting it out & back in. Colour-coded ferrules are a bonus.
Another good fix. We love our SEBO. Ours must be more than 15 years old and as good as the day we bought it. It amazes me how much the bags hold as well.
This was very helpful, thank you! I got a new Sebo (same model as yours) a couple of months ago and it had been working fine but when I came to use it recently, it was dead. I know I could have called in the guarantee but that would have taken ages, so looked up UA-cam. I watched part of your vid and took the handle out, but then watched the rest of the vid. Then I put the handle back in and - as I hadn't thought to check the fuse (duh!) - I thought I'd do that next, but before I pulled the plug out I flicked the switch at the plug and ... the Sebo sprang into life! Bizarre. Maybe pulling the handle out kicked it up the backside? But it suggests a loose connection somewhere.
When i first met my now wife 16 odd years ago. She borrowed my parents vacuum to do her car. Suddenly she came it to say that it had caught fire on the drive we still laugh about it today as the first experice my parents had of her!! Those bodges always come back to haunt you Vince!! 🤣
Recently owned and sold within an hour a Dyson ball. Never used with all attachments but the cord was slightly chewed. I regret selling it but I do love my Electrolux
I fixed this problem on our Sebo several times before it eventually gave up permanently. I think it's the same model as ours, and the handle slides apart lengthways once you've removed the screw.
I liked how you were able to take everything apart easily, or relatively easily. Shows that it's worth buying quality. Even tho the cable was a bit shoddy. Maybe the vacuum drew more Amps than the cable could handle? The cable, where it broke, looked a bit dark and melty.
I had the same fault with a heavy duty extension lead, the break was over a meter from the reel end. I have no idea why it broke where it did as no strain is anywhere near where the break was. The extension lead is an expensive armoured lined strengthened construction for use in garages, we used 3 of them, the reels were retractable and mounted on the wall, they were mainly used for inspection lamps and small hand tools (pre battery and LED days) After a load of investigation, the break was where the lead sometimes hung over one of the car ramps. Yip you can get strain breaks anywhere that the cable flexes, it don't matter how much strain relief either yourself or the manufacturers fit on to appliances, the copper inside the cable will give way. Caution, If you buy a cheap appliance from some of these Chinese manufacturers, test the cable before you use it, it could have a dangerous copper coated aluminium construction. Good fix Vince, enjoyed this one. 👍👍
Sebo, Kirby, and Miele, are in my opinion the best quality vacuum cleaners you can buy, forget shark, vax etc Great fix Vince I’m glad you hadn’t taped up bare wires with sellotape lol seen it so often it’s frightening lol 😊
Great fix cables usually break about an inch further back than the cable streanthter they always put on items like this. These restrains stop the cable breaking right at the entry to the cleaner but they break further back instead just after the strengthener.
100% Sebo are the best vacuums on the market. I sell and repair these, unusual for the handle to not come apart easily as if it had you wouldn't of had to remove the switch first.
I'm guessing SOMEBODY was well "rewarded" that night after the fix 🤣 Way to go! The whole time you were going back on the power cord I was thinking: "Oh this is futile". But once again, perseverance pays off!
As soon as I read that title, I knew what the issue would be. They had quite a few of them at the school and most of them were thrown away after a couple of years.
Hey Vince! I’m soooo happy you got the Sebo working again, you have excellent taste in vacuum cleaners 🤣, thank you so much for the shoutout, I’m absolutely honoured for the mention 🥰. I have something to send to you to try and fix 🥰
I dont know if I should say this but its strange in many ways to me to think that 5 years is some kind of a feat for a vacuum... most of us had the same in the house our whole childhoods. I have a filter queen kicking around, mind you it doesn't get daily use now but its 35 years old or something and its really still working like the day it was purchased from an in-home demonstration. The carpet on the other hand.... well that looks great.
have encounted roughly the same issue in the past with a george (loose wire, neighbours) and an commercial numatic wet/dry floor machine (previous employer) that had a blown motor and cable damage, had to replace entire flex due to IP rating, whilst doing so i felt an longer flex was required (motor was replaced by company maintenance, I received authorisation to install replacement flex. The neighbour was most pleased(george still ok) and Afaik the numatic is still in use today(left company a few years now, at time of leaving company had not long bought an newer model and thus there was an machine per a site).
Great Job Vince 👍you could have always tinned the ends of the wire with some solder if you didn't have any wire ferrules. Great fix as usual. Well done 🙂👍
Nice fault finding and good to see that tape & cable tie gone and properly repaired :) I have Volta vacuum cleaner from 2001, still working, never had any problems with it. Volta seems to be part of Electrolux, one of their brands. Didn't know this before, but this video inspired me to read some information from wikipedia. Nice to finally know after using it over 20 years, who's the actual manufacturer 😁
@@repairwins wow, that is a bummer. Thanks for sharing your experience. My washing machine is a Whirlpool, approaching 8 years. Previous one was also Whirlpool which destroyed itself when drum bearing failed during spin cycle.
The crimped wire ends are called ferrules. They make for excellent permanent connections to terminals. They are much better than bare twisted wires for longevity. The balls at the ends of the frayed wires indicate they heated sufficiently to melt the wires, so, yes, there was definitely arcing going on.
Like you say the wire has melted where it broke. That suggests that when it did break the ends of the wire were still touching and it was still usable until the ends melted and moved away from each other. The melting would of been caused by increased resistance due to the break.
Sebo quality, and still made in Germany. Spares and service kits all available at reasonable prices. Axminster woollen carpets, another great product. Buy once, buy right.
Vince, do yourself a favour and get some meter test leads with crocodile clips on, it will make life easier for you when testing if you have the negative clipped on so you'll have a free hand and the positive probe can be used for probing around 😉
3:24 - "So a very long time ago, I remember the lead was coming out from here". At that time, Mrs My Mate Vince, highlighted the problem with her tech savvy husband Vince knowing full well he'd run a full diagnostic check of the appliance, order in any spares and solder/unsolder/solder where necessary in order to succeed with a complete, permanent, safe fix. Or so she thought. Instead, as it was for wifey, it was a case of "pass the sellotape and cable ties love - there, fvck it, job done. Just don't wiggle the cable too much, or you'll be toast".
Its pronounced See-bo 😁 They are simply the best machines you can buy. Before the days of the internet you really had to discover SEBO. They were once the best kept secret of high quality vacuum cleaners; usually recommended through word of mouth. They are very easy to work on and repair. Saying that though, the main cause of failure of these is often just through neglect and improper maintenance.
I haven't bought a hoover in ten years, my neighbours threw out a dyson that I fixed and it is still going strong. Since then whenever I find one discarded I try and and fix it. Out of the 11 I've found only two couldn't be saved so got used as parts.
Best vacuum cleaner I ever owned was a Panasonic upright bagged vacuum. The brilliant thing about that vacuum was how the hose attachment easily came out of the vacuum making it quick and easy to use. I owned that vacuum for 20 years, and it worked flawlessly, well, that is, until one day I foolishly ran it over a wet rug. It still worked afterwards, but the motor made a weird noise ever since. One day, I bought a bagless canister vacuum to see how good they are compared to my bagged vacuum. I couldn't believe why on earth people would buy these garbage bagless canister vacuums. It was HORRIBLE! It had less suction power than my Panasonic and the canister was a filthy mess to empty. All the dust would escape into the air upon emptying the canister. Plus, it had two filters that needed to be washed every so often, otherwise, if the filters got too dirty, the vacuum would not work, and after you washed the filters, they needed 24 hours to dry before you can put them back into the vacuum. A couple of times I went to use the bagless vacuum and it wouldn't work because the filters were dirty, so I couldn't use the vacuum for 24 hours since I had to wait for the filters to dry. The first upright canister vacuum was a complete marketing gimmick, making it look like it was the next revolution in vacuuming, when all it is, was nothing but marketing gimmicks. Unfortunately the vacuum manufactures had to start switching to canisters otherwise their bagged models would not sell. Now its very difficult to find a quality upright bagged vacuum.
it seams a bit loud, if you use it regularly and for years on, worth to conciser changing ball bearings. These motors run on very high rpm, if a bearing fails they rarely survive the failure.
Im at 48 seconds in used to fix hovers and stuff for Clark’s electrical Main faults I found with hovers 1 cable break 2 motor brushes 3 blocked pick up pip 4 snapped agitation brush belt 5 most irritating one full bag a blocked filter
I thought I saw some dirt spots on your carpet...Was my monitor... Well thought about the cable ties at the end..I was scratching my head a few times here.
I think they would get hot because high current is passing through a thin cable. Thin due to some of it being broken. Even when there was a connection the resistance was fluctuating. Sign that the cable is faulty.
I thought you were over-dressed for summer, makes sense your comment at the end of the video. I'm sure your wife was pleased, as please as you certainly!
Look up Manchester Vacs video on how to replace the cord here on UA-cam Tube it’s excellent and explains everything with regards to replacing the power cord and an important safety tip with regards to making sure the aluminium handle does not become live. Had my Sebo for 30 years and still going strong.
That is some carpet. You have been fixing stuff for years including the Rolls Royce. You must have had some grease or oil type incident at some point 😂
Better to have soldered the wire ends. Leaded solder doesn't really crack, and the last thing you want is a bunch of tiny wires in a screw terminal all making different contact. That causes resistance and heat. It might not make a difference as the cable is oversized anyway but I still would have soldered it. I never put stranded wires into a screw terminal like that.
You should never solder the ends of wire in screw terminals, solder creeps and the joints come loose, which can cause heating (fire) or the device stops working. The easy and cheap option for Sebo would be to dip the ends of the wire in a solder pot, but they don't do it, they go to the expense of crimping ferrules on the ends and this is why.
I would guess the break occurred where you had the cable zip tied to the handle. It would have been flexing there with no strain relief. Edit: And I've now reached the point where you came to the same conclusion.
I wish you'd take your metal ring off your finger when you're working on electronics Vince 🙂. Another good fix though chap, nice and straight forward if not a little bit fiddly
My heart weeps every time you turn that DMM back on after only just having turned it off. Does your one not have a sleep mode? If so, need to buy one of those. I leave mine on all the time for the entire duration of me working on something and it just goes to sleep after a bit, then when I want to use it again, I just press a button and it wakes up again.
There’s no need for the cable tie that’s what the little clear brownish part is with the two Phillips screws. That’s to restrain the cable to stop it from moving my times five finally snapped. It’s cable 15 years later.
What ibe done in past if no way of securing cable ive tied a loose knot in the cable and cut neutral short so ifcable pulls out a bit neutral will be one to come out amd wont shock opposite to how youd do a plug.
For a vacuum like that, when you spending hundreds on it, they seem to have weak wiring (i.e. not thick and protected). The amount of flexing required is insane, for upright vacuum cleaners.
i was an industrial cleaner for 15 years and this was my main weapon of choice. absolute beast of a unit. but sadly it will forever live in the shadow of henry.
Generally working on a vacuum sucks. But you really made repairing it a clean sweep... You don't just don't have a brush with success, you embrace it! That's really calling all the naysayers onto the carpet. Good job. 100 points awarded. Cheers from So.Ca.USA 3rd house on the left.
😂👍👍👍👍👍
You are right ,buy quality and you can`t go wrong , I bought a Hoover upright back in 1982 and it still works
SEBO - used by hotels everywhere! My friend went to the trouble of looking at the vacuums used in hotels to see what brands they use, as she wanted the best most reliable machine. It's Sebo! Great fix, very interesting about where the break occurred, Thanks Vince! All the best
Don't forget Numatic for canister/cylinder vacuum cleaners. The parts are readily available as well.
I work on an awful lot of Sebo vacuums. Most common thing I change is cables as a lot of them I service are used in care homes, where cleaners are a bit rough on them. Very solidly built machines though, and stupidly simple to tear down and work on.
Great video. I had the exact same problem. I'm a massive SEBO fan they are just so good and no taking it to bits to vacuum the edges just pull out the wand!!
Great fix. Many products fail where the power cable enters, is regularly twisted, gets warm or gets run over by a suitcase. Given the cleaner's age (the device, not your wife), you may want to think about replacing the entire cable. My wife was using it, touched the previous Vince Sellotape repair and boom, my wife stopped working. Slightly burned carpet sample taken to Harrods.
💀
Great job and analysis on the fault at the end Vince - definitely that's what happened!
Thanks Chris👍
Since I found your channel I love it everything you do and say I learned new thing when I watch you will done 🇦🇺
I'm always a little disappointed when it's a tea break fix 🙂 I love your looong videos 🥰
Good catch. When I search for broken wires I grab the end then give a nice steady pull force, the wire insulation will usually get thinner (hourglass) right over the break, I just cu back a few inches from that to get non stresses wire to work from.
Oh and it's pronounced seee bow
Great repair Vince! I've had many sebos ans this fault has occurred before but generally these are fantastic reliable quality German cleaners - they are the only company I know that their cleaners look so old fashioned but are so bang up to date at the same time - their latest one - the cordless bp60 is nearly 1000 pounds - your into kirby territory there!
Vince your the only guy that gets excited when a household appliance fails lol .. great vid mate ..must be the flexing when wrapping the cable up 😊
This seems to be a common fault with Sebo vacuums. My mum's Sebo started to be problematic and it was an almost identical fault (literally when I saw your video it was 'I bet it's cable failure' and indeed it was). I ended up cutting 30cm off the cable and reterminating it into the handle. In my mum's vac there was a clear way to disassemble the handle (very similar to yours) so I could loop the cables back into the switch using the strain relief. I also thankfully had some cable crimps to terminate the end.
Yes, it's happened to a few BS36's at work and I am very careful to not strain the cable where it enters the machine as it ends up wearing the cable away. We have some Ensign badged SEBO's where the cable is a plugged type (two pin "kettle" style) directly into the motorhead.
As for Axminster carpet, my Gran was once taken out for the day by her cousin only to find on returning the carpet in the lounge/dining room replaced with a lovely Axminster carpet, what was quite interesting is Axminster was only about 30-45mins from where she lived, so it was a local product!
Had ours for 20 years. Still going strong. Can still buy parts. Way better value than Dyson.
I fixed a similar fault on a 30-year old Vorwerk Tiger 251 (I think Sebo was founded in the 80s by some engineers who worked for Vorwerk before). The power leads which go through the inside of the hose were severed where they come out through the hose wall and lead to the on-off switch on the handle. Luckily I could solder them together again and put some shrink tubing on it. Was a nice success to be able to take it apart there as these (way overpriced) products were properly designed to be repairable. You can still find after-market replacements parts for these old models.
I think you're right about where the cable snapped (i was actually writing a comment as you mentioned it) and also, probably haven't lost any "pratical" cable due to it not being restrained by the cable ties as previously
love your channel dude,you give people hope that a normal bloke can fix stuff
Many thanks for sharing this video. Saved me a shed load of time when ours did exactly the same thing. Only disaster was the line break was at the plug, which meant I had chopped up a lot of wire before I found the break. Wife less than impressed with 3 inch lead she was left with…….😂
you probably found out already, but you 1.remove screw.
2. slacken feed wires,
3. pull handle out of aluminum tube, and pry freshly exposed portion of handle backwards apart.
(I've worked on Winsdor/Karcher versions of these vacuums for 19 years. LOVE THEM, ...industrial durable.
The "crimps" on the end of the fine stranded wires are called boot lace ferrules. Quite important when using screw terminals with fine stranded wire as when you tighten the screws down in the terminals this causes the fine strands to splay apart reducing the contact area with the terminal thus reducing the current carrying capacity.
The ferrule also protects the conductor from damage when the screw it tightened down.
Pretty sure Vince that the cable strain relief was the beige piece of plastic with two screws either side much like what you find in a British plug.
Hard to tell as the video was sped up but I cannot see the Germans not incorporating a strain relief into the handle as the cable is going to get pulled on during use.
Ferrules simplify assembly, that's it.
You can't really screw up (geddit lol) a ferrule connection while you'd be here all day listing how stranded goes wrong (no twisting or bending into hooks, whiskers hanging out, damage from the screw, etc).
As someone who has also spent years doing stranded connections, I like ferrules.
@@TD75 In Europe we class conductor sizes, the conductor class of the cable in this video would be class 5 which would need a ferrule which is why the manufacturer install one.
You can see how conductors are classed in Europe in this video.
ua-cam.com/video/wX-NYCEfVlk/v-deo.html
You can also see why ferrules are used in this video here which is pretty much what I said in my original comment about damage to the conductor & reducing the current carry capacity of the cable. Stray whiskers are also another reason.
ua-cam.com/video/bJk0mzaATI4/v-deo.html
@@TD75 The factory making the power cables can knock them out with ferrules no worries, same as they do for any wiring harness that has blade connectors, Molex etc.
The dudes assembling the vacuum just need to poke them into the holes, use push fitting and you can even skip the screwdriver. Minimal training, fast, very few failures compared to stranded. It's just money, not "this is better than that."
The ferrules I use crimp square so you get a good connection with the screw or whatever. Good for rework or repair as you don't stuff up the stripped copper getting it out & back in. Colour-coded ferrules are a bonus.
Another good fix. We love our SEBO. Ours must be more than 15 years old and as good as the day we bought it. It amazes me how much the bags hold as well.
This was very helpful, thank you! I got a new Sebo (same model as yours) a couple of months ago and it had been working fine but when I came to use it recently, it was dead. I know I could have called in the guarantee but that would have taken ages, so looked up UA-cam. I watched part of your vid and took the handle out, but then watched the rest of the vid. Then I put the handle back in and - as I hadn't thought to check the fuse (duh!) - I thought I'd do that next, but before I pulled the plug out I flicked the switch at the plug and ... the Sebo sprang into life! Bizarre. Maybe pulling the handle out kicked it up the backside? But it suggests a loose connection somewhere.
When i first met my now wife 16 odd years ago. She borrowed my parents vacuum to do her car.
Suddenly she came it to say that it had caught fire on the drive we still laugh about it today as the first experice my parents had of her!!
Those bodges always come back to haunt you Vince!! 🤣
🤣🤣👍
Recently owned and sold within an hour a Dyson ball. Never used with all attachments but the cord was slightly chewed. I regret selling it but I do love my Electrolux
I fixed this problem on our Sebo several times before it eventually gave up permanently. I think it's the same model as ours, and the handle slides apart lengthways once you've removed the screw.
I liked how you were able to take everything apart easily, or relatively easily. Shows that it's worth buying quality. Even tho the cable was a bit shoddy. Maybe the vacuum drew more Amps than the cable could handle? The cable, where it broke, looked a bit dark and melty.
I think it broke where the zip ties were.
i'm glad you're sharing all these with us. thank you.
German quality. Bought a 50 pound 9 year old Miele dishwasher off Facebook marketplace. 4 years later, still working perfectly.
I had the same fault with a heavy duty extension lead, the break was over a meter from the reel end.
I have no idea why it broke where it did as no strain is anywhere near where the break was.
The extension lead is an expensive armoured lined strengthened construction for use in garages, we used 3 of them, the reels were retractable and mounted on the wall, they were mainly used for inspection lamps and small hand tools (pre battery and LED days)
After a load of investigation, the break was where the lead sometimes hung over one of the car ramps.
Yip you can get strain breaks anywhere that the cable flexes, it don't matter how much strain relief either yourself or the manufacturers fit on to appliances, the copper inside the cable will give way.
Caution, If you buy a cheap appliance from some of these Chinese manufacturers, test the cable before you use it, it could have a dangerous copper coated aluminium construction.
Good fix Vince, enjoyed this one. 👍👍
Sebo, Kirby, and Miele, are in my opinion the best quality vacuum cleaners you can buy, forget shark, vax etc
Great fix Vince I’m glad you hadn’t taped up bare wires with sellotape lol seen it so often it’s frightening lol 😊
Great fix cables usually break about an inch further back than the cable streanthter they always put on items like this. These restrains stop the cable breaking right at the entry to the cleaner but they break further back instead just after the strengthener.
100% Sebo are the best vacuums on the market. I sell and repair these, unusual for the handle to not come apart easily as if it had you wouldn't of had to remove the switch first.
An aside about your carpet: Axminster has been making carpets for so long that Jane Austen mentioned the company in her letters!
I'm guessing SOMEBODY was well "rewarded" that night after the fix 🤣 Way to go! The whole time you were going back on the power cord I was thinking: "Oh this is futile". But once again, perseverance pays off!
We have a Sebo, very well built, but I use the handheld Dyson more as it’s lighter, Sebo’s are pretty heavy machines.
As soon as I read that title, I knew what the issue would be. They had quite a few of them at the school and most of them were thrown away after a couple of years.
Hey Vince! I’m soooo happy you got the Sebo working again, you have excellent taste in vacuum cleaners 🤣, thank you so much for the shoutout, I’m absolutely honoured for the mention 🥰. I have something to send to you to try and fix 🥰
Thank you Dorian😎👌
Sebos great 👍 had my Felix nearly 10 years and I bought it second hand.
I dont know if I should say this but its strange in many ways to me to think that 5 years is some kind of a feat for a vacuum... most of us had the same in the house our whole childhoods. I have a filter queen kicking around, mind you it doesn't get daily use now but its 35 years old or something and its really still working like the day it was purchased from an in-home demonstration. The carpet on the other hand.... well that looks great.
have encounted roughly the same issue in the past with a george (loose wire, neighbours) and an commercial numatic wet/dry floor machine (previous employer) that had a blown motor and cable damage, had to replace entire flex due to IP rating, whilst doing so i felt an longer flex was required (motor was replaced by company maintenance, I received authorisation to install replacement flex. The neighbour was most pleased(george still ok) and Afaik the numatic is still in use today(left company a few years now, at time of leaving company had not long bought an newer model and thus there was an machine per a site).
Great Job Vince 👍you could have always tinned the ends of the wire with some solder if you didn't have any wire ferrules. Great fix as usual. Well done 🙂👍
yes he says that.
Well done for fixing, poor wife probably just wanted a new Hoover lol, nice story about the carpet
Nice fault finding and good to see that tape & cable tie gone and properly repaired :)
I have Volta vacuum cleaner from 2001, still working, never had any problems with it. Volta seems to be part of Electrolux, one of their brands. Didn't know this before, but this video inspired me to read some information from wikipedia. Nice to finally know after using it over 20 years, who's the actual manufacturer 😁
The biggest problem with an Electrolux is deciding who gets it in your will.
@@repairwins wow, that is a bummer. Thanks for sharing your experience.
My washing machine is a Whirlpool, approaching 8 years. Previous one was also Whirlpool which destroyed itself when drum bearing failed during spin cycle.
The crimped wire ends are called ferrules. They make for excellent permanent connections to terminals. They are much better than bare twisted wires for longevity.
The balls at the ends of the frayed wires indicate they heated sufficiently to melt the wires, so, yes, there was definitely arcing going on.
Like you say the wire has melted where it broke. That suggests that when it did break the ends of the wire were still touching and it was still usable until the ends melted and moved away from each other. The melting would of been caused by increased resistance due to the break.
My favourite subject-vacuum cleaners!I have a vast knowledge about these!
Before seeing the vid in full Vince that power lead looks dodgy!
Nice, Sebo is top shelf stuff.
Sebo quality, and still made in Germany. Spares and service kits all available at reasonable prices. Axminster woollen carpets, another great product. Buy once, buy right.
Vince, do yourself a favour and get some meter test leads with crocodile clips on, it will make life easier for you when testing if you have the negative clipped on so you'll have a free hand and the positive probe can be used for probing around 😉
3:24 - "So a very long time ago, I remember the lead was coming out from here". At that time, Mrs My Mate Vince, highlighted the problem with her tech savvy husband Vince knowing full well he'd run a full diagnostic check of the appliance, order in any spares and solder/unsolder/solder where necessary in order to succeed with a complete, permanent, safe fix. Or so she thought. Instead, as it was for wifey, it was a case of "pass the sellotape and cable ties love - there, fvck it, job done. Just don't wiggle the cable too much, or you'll be toast".
Excellent Vince! My favourite kind of video!!!!
Well done Vince
Its pronounced See-bo 😁 They are simply the best machines you can buy. Before the days of the internet you really had to discover SEBO. They were once the best kept secret of high quality vacuum cleaners; usually recommended through word of mouth.
They are very easy to work on and repair. Saying that though, the main cause of failure of these is often just through neglect and improper maintenance.
Result! That was a good one.
I haven't bought a hoover in ten years, my neighbours threw out a dyson that I fixed and it is still going strong. Since then whenever I find one discarded I try and and fix it.
Out of the 11 I've found only two couldn't be saved so got used as parts.
Great video, thnx Vince
Another great Fix Vince!
May your expensive woollen carpets remain moth-free Vince!
Best vacuum cleaner I ever owned was a Panasonic upright bagged vacuum. The brilliant thing about that vacuum was how the hose attachment easily came out of the vacuum making it quick and easy to use. I owned that vacuum for 20 years, and it worked flawlessly, well, that is, until one day I foolishly ran it over a wet rug. It still worked afterwards, but the motor made a weird noise ever since.
One day, I bought a bagless canister vacuum to see how good they are compared to my bagged vacuum. I couldn't believe why on earth people would buy these garbage bagless canister vacuums. It was HORRIBLE! It had less suction power than my Panasonic and the canister was a filthy mess to empty. All the dust would escape into the air upon emptying the canister. Plus, it had two filters that needed to be washed every so often, otherwise, if the filters got too dirty, the vacuum would not work, and after you washed the filters, they needed 24 hours to dry before you can put them back into the vacuum. A couple of times I went to use the bagless vacuum and it wouldn't work because the filters were dirty, so I couldn't use the vacuum for 24 hours since I had to wait for the filters to dry.
The first upright canister vacuum was a complete marketing gimmick, making it look like it was the next revolution in vacuuming, when all it is, was nothing but marketing gimmicks. Unfortunately the vacuum manufactures had to start switching to canisters otherwise their bagged models would not sell. Now its very difficult to find a quality upright bagged vacuum.
Here in New Zealand my parent's 30s era Art Deco house had the origional British made Axminster carpet in it.
Great video
it seams a bit loud, if you use it regularly and for years on, worth to conciser changing ball bearings. These motors run on very high rpm, if a bearing fails they rarely survive the failure.
Im at 48 seconds in used to fix hovers and stuff for Clark’s electrical
Main faults I found with hovers
1 cable break
2 motor brushes
3 blocked pick up pip
4 snapped agitation brush belt
5 most irritating one full bag a blocked filter
The use of a volt stick would have found the break in seconds.
Nice fix Vince, yes axeminster carpets are one of the best carpets in the world.
Did u receive my parcel yet ?
I thought I saw some dirt spots on your carpet...Was my monitor...
Well thought about the cable ties at the end..I was scratching my head a few times here.
Happy wife, happy life.Yet, the vacuum is pretty LOUD!
Well Vince you know: Happy Wife, Happy Life 😂😂😂
I think they would get hot because high current is passing through a thin cable. Thin due to some of it being broken.
Even when there was a connection the resistance was fluctuating. Sign that the cable is faulty.
I thought you were over-dressed for summer, makes sense your comment at the end of the video. I'm sure your wife was pleased, as please as you certainly!
I wonder if measure the resistance using Ohms on the multimeter would have identified the faulty section sooner?
Look up Manchester Vacs video on how to replace the cord here on UA-cam Tube it’s excellent and explains everything with regards to replacing the power cord and an important safety tip with regards to making sure the aluminium handle does not become live. Had my Sebo for 30 years and still going strong.
Hi, this is a common fault with all sebos
Which was nice
Looks like it failed where the zip ties were.
Sweet
That is some carpet. You have been fixing stuff for years including the Rolls Royce. You must have had some grease or oil type incident at some point 😂
Better to have soldered the wire ends. Leaded solder doesn't really crack, and the last thing you want is a bunch of tiny wires in a screw terminal all making different contact. That causes resistance and heat. It might not make a difference as the cable is oversized anyway but I still would have soldered it. I never put stranded wires into a screw terminal like that.
You should never solder the ends of wire in screw terminals, solder creeps and the joints come loose, which can cause heating (fire) or the device stops working. The easy and cheap option for Sebo would be to dip the ends of the wire in a solder pot, but they don't do it, they go to the expense of crimping ferrules on the ends and this is why.
Hi Vince, our Sebo has stopped raising and lowering on wood/carpet flooring. Could you undo yours and show us what is going wrong maybe please?
Same design as Karcher/Windsor used in hotels everywhere
Brilliant!
I would guess the break occurred where you had the cable zip tied to the handle. It would have been flexing there with no strain relief. Edit: And I've now reached the point where you came to the same conclusion.
When something breaks, I bet you get as excited as Steve Irwin did with a crocodile!
Even hoover salesmen say it's the best hoover.
I wish you'd take your metal ring off your finger when you're working on electronics Vince 🙂. Another good fix though chap, nice and straight forward if not a little bit fiddly
i would of tinned with solder the ends of the cables but good video
My heart weeps every time you turn that DMM back on after only just having turned it off. Does your one not have a sleep mode? If so, need to buy one of those. I leave mine on all the time for the entire duration of me working on something and it just goes to sleep after a bit, then when I want to use it again, I just press a button and it wakes up again.
Could've done the rest of the floor while you were at it Vince😁
Posh carpet result mate!
Great fix and happy wife happy life 😅
😂
There’s no need for the cable tie that’s what the little clear brownish part is with the two Phillips screws. That’s to restrain the cable to stop it from moving my times five finally snapped. It’s cable 15 years later.
Had gone where the cable tie was :-)
What ibe done in past if no way of securing cable ive tied a loose knot in the cable and cut neutral short so ifcable pulls out a bit neutral will be one to come out amd wont shock opposite to how youd do a plug.
The wire was cut around where the cable ties were looks like.
hes doing that funny thing where he wears old mans clothes again 😉
If a flex has broken at one point it will go again best to replace it.
I had the same problem on different vacuum cleaner with the wire after I fix that the motor went not long after
For a vacuum like that, when you spending hundreds on it, they seem to have weak wiring (i.e. not thick and protected). The amount of flexing required is insane, for upright vacuum cleaners.
Look online for part for the sebo
it was recorded 8 months ago?? i did not see that coming xD
i was an industrial cleaner for 15 years and this was my main weapon of choice. absolute beast of a unit. but sadly it will forever live in the shadow of henry.
I'm disappointed with the lack of Flip-Flops in this video.