MattRoberts
Established Member
EDIT - **** AES has posted details of an automatic design later in this thread ****
So we were discussing the issue of when shop vacs with cyclones get blocked, it creates a huge amount of pressure on the system. This will cause the weakest component to implode, which usually means the container that the dust is falling in to.
You can create a simple pressure release valve which will trigger when the pressure inside the container gets too much. I can't take credit for this I got the idea from Peter Parfett. This is a pretty simple solution though.
Get a bit of plastic pipe around 40mm in diameter, and cut a 20mm slice off the end. Next, make a cut in this slice with a saw. Now cut a hole into the lid of your dust container, but make it a slightly smaller diameter than your pipe. This will ensure the slice of pipe is a snug fit in the hole.
All you need then is to cut a couple of small bits of wood. One will be the cap, so it needs to be wider than the pipe. The other needs to be a bar shape, so when it sits on top of the other end of the pipe it still allows air to flow through.
Epoxy a bit of metal to the cap piece (or even better, use a metal lid as the cap).
I connected mine using a few cable ties, threading one through a magnet (you can get countersunk magnets which have holes in them). Our you could just epoxy a magnet to the bar piece.
That's about it. When the pressure is too much for the magnet to hold the cap, it pops off. After fixing the blockage, the slack in the purple cable tie allows you to yank the cap back on without having to open the container of even switch off the vac.
So we were discussing the issue of when shop vacs with cyclones get blocked, it creates a huge amount of pressure on the system. This will cause the weakest component to implode, which usually means the container that the dust is falling in to.
You can create a simple pressure release valve which will trigger when the pressure inside the container gets too much. I can't take credit for this I got the idea from Peter Parfett. This is a pretty simple solution though.
Get a bit of plastic pipe around 40mm in diameter, and cut a 20mm slice off the end. Next, make a cut in this slice with a saw. Now cut a hole into the lid of your dust container, but make it a slightly smaller diameter than your pipe. This will ensure the slice of pipe is a snug fit in the hole.
All you need then is to cut a couple of small bits of wood. One will be the cap, so it needs to be wider than the pipe. The other needs to be a bar shape, so when it sits on top of the other end of the pipe it still allows air to flow through.
Epoxy a bit of metal to the cap piece (or even better, use a metal lid as the cap).
I connected mine using a few cable ties, threading one through a magnet (you can get countersunk magnets which have holes in them). Our you could just epoxy a magnet to the bar piece.
That's about it. When the pressure is too much for the magnet to hold the cap, it pops off. After fixing the blockage, the slack in the purple cable tie allows you to yank the cap back on without having to open the container of even switch off the vac.