Chip or vacuum extractor for router table?

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Hsmith192

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Does anybody know if you should use a Chip or vacuum extractor for a router table??
 
The ports are comparatively tiny, so HPLV extractor is better as it will pull the air through them better.
 
The ports are comparatively tiny, so HPLV extractor is better as it will pull the air through them better.

Hi @Jake & all

I have a similar dilemma to the OP.

The port on the back of my router table fence is 63mm. Not that tiny.

I have two options. I could step down from the 100mm ports on either a HVLP double filtration chip extractor or a HPLV Numatic NVD750 shop vacuum.

Which do you think is preferable and why?

I've read the excellent guide to dust extraction by @siggy_7 but still not sure what the best option is in this scenario. Any advice appreciated!

Cheers!
 
63mm is tiny for a HVLP extractor. They barely like 100mm, and 63mm is well under half the area/volume. I'd use the Numatic.

Plus to get good extraction you need a wye to the machine port as well, which is invariably even smaller.
 
Depends what router you have in your table. Are you talking the monsters going up to 1/2” shanked bits, using the large cutters for example regular door making. Or, something more middle sized say like a Bosch POF model, or a trim router in a desktop table. I have the NV750 on my beefier router table. Via a cyclone. My Makita trim router in a desktop table is connected to my wet’n’dry vac.
 
Depends what router you have in your table. Are you talking the monsters going up to 1/2” shanked bits, using the large cutters for example regular door making. Or, something more middle sized say like a Bosch POF model, or a trim router in a desktop table. I have the NV750 on my beefier router table. Via a cyclone. My Makita trim router in a desktop table is connected to my wet’n’dry vac.

I have the Bosch GMF1600. Using 1/2” shanked bits including a slot cutter set and a large chamfer bit. From what you and others have said, it seems the NVD750 (with attached cyclone) is the better of the two options.
Cheers.
 
I used both. I bought one of these and fitted it underneath the table, below a hole cut just beyond the insert plate; I refer to it as The Black Hole because it sucks in everything thrown forward. A 100mm hose runs to the larger extractor and a 63mm comes off the fitting to extract from the dust port on the fence. A small shop vac hose connects directly to the router.
 
I used both. I bought one of these and fitted it underneath the table, below a hole cut just beyond the insert plate; I refer to it as The Black Hole because it sucks in everything thrown forward. A 100mm hose runs to the larger extractor and a 63mm comes off the fitting to extract from the dust port on the fence. A small shop vac hose connects directly to the router.
This is the one I have been using, swapped my numeric for it, and it has a larger diameter pipe than the numeric I did get the turbo head from eSpares and what a difference that makes I just plug my power tool into the plug on the vac and as you switch it on the vac starts up, so there’s no messing about with two switches I think they are Swedish, I’ve got there power washer as well about £60 if it breaks at that price I’d just get another but I’ve had it 3 years and it’s still going
 

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This is how I made mine. I cut the front off a soil pipe fitting (100mm) and attached it to the fence. There is also a repurposed Scheppach hold down roller. These are great, spring loaded in the vertical plane and by turning the rubber wheel pivot in they also push towards the fence.
Basically a hand powered 'power feed'.
The only 'fault' in my system is that you cannot separate the infeed and outfeed fences.

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