I use one of these:
KEMO M103N. You can get on
amazon DE for about £20 including UK shipping.
It could be wired in to just one master socket, then anything plugged into that, when in use, would then turn on the slave socket ( extractor)..
I have it wired into a number of sockets throughout my shed, each marked 'extraction', and then the slave output goes to a single socket marked 'extractor' which serves my extractor. I have these 'extraction' sockets next to each set of normal sockets, the only difference is that the live for my 'extraction' sockets comes via the KEMO M103N.
Works brilliantly. I only use one machine/tool at a time, usually low powered things like sander/router/tracksaw/table saw/chop saw etc. My extractor is a 1200w 50L bin type unit which I expect is similar to yours (mine's vonhaus but thats a cheapo brand).
I use a dedicated chip extractor for my P/T and probably wouldn't choose to run it through this as I would be worried that both are large machines with big motors = a lot of draw on startup together. Given my P/T isn't really a machine where i'm constantly turning it on and off, it isn't something that I think would benefit from having automatic extraction switching, so I don't mind turning the chip extractor on manually for that.
According to the specs it could run a 1200w extractor on the slave, and a 2000w tool on the master, however that is the max it is rated to. Specs are here:
Mine is all hardwired in, but there is absolutely no reason that it couldn't be made up into a portable unit in a comp box (i.e plug in to mains, then a electrical comp box with the unit in, then out of that two sockets a master and slave (machine goes to master, extractor to slave). If I did that then I would be very keen to have an RCD as the plug to mains. I quite like that mine is hardwired in.
The up side to my system is that whenever I use a tool the extractor turns on, but the downside is it also turns off immediately when the tool stops drawing power. I did on a temporary basis previously use equivalent of one of
these, which did the job but was way underbuilt for the task and
not at all advisable. The nice thing with that though was that it kept the power on to the slave for 2-3 seconds after the master stopped drawing power, meaning that the extractor kept running whilst the sawblade etc was spinning down and it scooped up a bit of the dust right at the end. Probably didn't make that much difference really.
Ovbiously all of this requires some electrical knowhow and could be unsafe if done in correctly so I wouldn't reccomend doing it unless you are appropritely qualified the usual don't do this at home advice etc etc....