Deadeye
Established Member
This woodworking thing is fun, but hard if you're teaching yourself.
I built a cyclone - which works really well. It's attached to an 850m3/hr extractor (basic Axminster one).
Question 1. I have positioned the extractor downstream of the cyclone, so that it handles clean air. Is there a reason not to do this (normally the chips and dust go through the machine and into a bag)?
Question 2. It handles bandsaw, tablesaw and router table really well (yes, I went shopping). It finds the planer/thicknesser harder to keep up with. By that I mean some shavings end up on the floor; blockages haven't been a problem. I use blast gates at each machine. I have been offered a second, similar spec, extractor. Could I add it in series, perhaps close to the P/thicknesser? Or is that a daft idea and I need to buy a new one with double the airflow?
For what it's worth, it's all 100mm, except the router table steps down to 60mm.
thanks
I built a cyclone - which works really well. It's attached to an 850m3/hr extractor (basic Axminster one).
Question 1. I have positioned the extractor downstream of the cyclone, so that it handles clean air. Is there a reason not to do this (normally the chips and dust go through the machine and into a bag)?
Question 2. It handles bandsaw, tablesaw and router table really well (yes, I went shopping). It finds the planer/thicknesser harder to keep up with. By that I mean some shavings end up on the floor; blockages haven't been a problem. I use blast gates at each machine. I have been offered a second, similar spec, extractor. Could I add it in series, perhaps close to the P/thicknesser? Or is that a daft idea and I need to buy a new one with double the airflow?
For what it's worth, it's all 100mm, except the router table steps down to 60mm.
thanks