A cyclone is a good idea. I use a karcher shop vac with a cyclone. I don’t bother with a bag in the vac as hardly anything gets past the cyclone.I use a Henry, made in England, pretty bomb proof and cheap bags. Use mine with a cyclone to make the bags last even longer.
I use a Henry, made in England, pretty bomb proof and cheap bags. Use mine with a cyclone to make the bags last even longer.
I haven't made it that far yet!Ditto - with some ducting made from 40mm plastic waste pipe and home-made plastic blast-gates. Works a treat with a cyclone mounted on box about 50cm cube made from OSB with the edges caulked and over-centre clips for the lid to seal and maintain pressure.
I also have a spare Henry hose that I can connect to a blast-gate for cleaning up sawdust on the benches, floor, machines etc.
I haven't made it that far yet!
I could do with a spare hose as mine keeps falling off the cyclone (thus the cable ties!)
Use a dust pan and brush, finish off with the vac??Opinion from a complete newbie with limited experience - I use the Wickes blue one, very cheap at £44 (get the bags and filters off eBay, much cheaper compared to Wickes). Works very well, and ideal to get up and running in a shop on a budget, but just be aware of the limitations of all of these types of Wet & Dry Vacs. In a small, cramped shed shop all the minor niggles (and jet engine noise!) will become an annoyance after a fairly short while. If I was doing things again, I would either allocate more budget for dust management, or adjust my perspective of a cheap W&D vac being a temp measure whilst planning for a better option down the line. At present I am unsuccessfully dropping big hints to Mrs. Santa for a numatic or camvac for xmas!
Ditto - with some ducting made from 40mm plastic waste pipe and home-made plastic blast-gates. Works a treat with a cyclone mounted on box about 50cm cube made from OSB with the edges caulked and over-centre clips for the lid to seal and maintain pressure.
I also have a spare Henry hose that I can connect to a blast-gate for cleaning up sawdust on the benches, floor, machine
A sliding "gate" that opens/closes the ducting orifice - you just open the one that has the pipe connected to the machine/tool you are using - it maintains the suction in the system.What's a Blast Gate?
That’s good to hear. I use a Titan shop vac with a cyclone, but it’s on its last legs, so plan to use a Henry insteadI use a Henry, made in England, pretty bomb proof and cheap bags. Use mine with a cyclone to make the bags last even longer.
Ok. Thank you.A sliding "gate" that opens/closes the ducting orifice - you just open the one that has the pipe connected to the machine/tool you are using - it maintains the suction in the system.
I made my own with 8mm plastic sheet and push-fit waste pipefittings cut in half.
Google and select Images - you'll see lots of them - the function becomes obvious
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