When this happened to me it was the three vacuum hoses on the transfer case switch were on wrong. There is a nipple on the switch and a hole in the vacuum hoses.
Vacuum cleaners either come bagless or with bags. Vacuum bags have a special bag to where all the dirt and debris go into after the vacuum cleaner is done whisking it up through its head that is on the floor/carpet. There is also an option to go bagless, in which the vacuum cleaner has a detachable canister that you empty then replace.
If it fits, yes. You'd have to find one of matching size. Kirby OEM belts are kind of a pain to come by, which is a serious downside of buying one of those vacuums.
A vacuum cleaner is a cleaning tool in many households. Most come with a carpet and rug cleaning design, which features a rotating brush to pick up dirt so that the vacuum can carry it to the bag. These are called 'upright' vacuum cleaners, as opposed to 'canister' vacuum cleaners, which are connected by a hose to the tool being used. Many upright vacuums now have hoses, which can be used like a canister hose, and some canister vacuums have power heads, with rotating brushes. Vacuum is created by an impeller, which pulls air from one part of the machine to another. The low pressure, or 'vacuum' is used to transport the dirt and dust into a bag or receptacle. Some vacuum cleaners are mounted on trucks, and have hoses six inches (15 cm) in diameter, and are used for cleaning industrial sites. They are powered by the truck engine, and have very large tanks that the material is stored in until disposal.
I have been working on one I just got and it wouldn't idle after a tune up. I found a vacuum a large vacuum hose that comes off the under side of the air cleaner that goes to a vacuum pot. Off of that comes another one of the same size and goes to the base off the carburetor. It had come off and when I replaced it, it began to idle normally. You might try that and make sure all of your vacuum hoses are attached. A good tune up helps also (new plugs/wires/air cleaner, etc).
Check vacuum hoses and diaphrams under dash and at firewall
Most vacuum cleaners come with a brush like attachment that works great for cleaning a couches. Most of them can even get up dog hair.
No
maybe vacuum hoses have come off front differential solenoids or from somewhere else this system is vacuum actuated then electric clutch engages
check your owner's manual Check for vacuum leaks (replace all vacuum hoses anyway, they are cheap) but also remove and clean the EGR valve.
Roomba, the autonomous robotic vacuum cleaner, was first produced in 2002. It was so popular that over 6 million units were sold by February of 2011. As of 2012, there have been four generations of Roomba units produced.
Evidently you are loosing vacuum to the blend doors. Look under the hood at the rear of the engine. Check all of the vacuum hoses to see if any are off or broken