I've been meaning to get one for ages, as my TS cabinet is FULL of fine chipboard dust despite weekly cleans. The planer clogs up the pipes all the time, and generally my vac is just not up to it.
I have a soil pipe which I secured to the rough floor before they poured the concrete for the final floor, and the vac had no chance, it's full of wood waste now.
So the Jet is rated at 1600 m3/h at 15cm and 1150 at 10cm.
It comes with 2x10cm outlets, so how quite one gets to 15cm I don't know. Anyway...
Putting together was easy, it's the one with the cone "vortex" in it, which may not be as good as a Thein, the dust in bag does swirl around, however seems pretty good at protecting the filter. I got the one with the fine filter cartridge and can I just say well done to Axi for getting it to me in time for xmas. They were out of stock only last week.
When I put it together I was thinking "this is massive", however it's growing on me now. Or rather shrinking on me.
I tested the flow at source, using one 10cm outlet, and the other capped off. I got 904 m3/h or 532 cfm. Pretty close to the rated value.
Opening the second gate to let the fan "breathe" as some has suggested, reduced the air speed in the other. However static pressure drops etc could be something else...
Connecting it to a 60mm reducer after 1m flexible 10cm pipe, I was getting same airspeed, however with the reduced opening that's 295 m3/h, however still much more than the 140 I was getting from the vac.
However after running it through the ducting, I was down to 140. The same as the vac. Opening the second port on the DE made no difference.
So my first question is: if I get the same value as vac, and it's more convenient, any reason not to use this, and trundle my vac around for power tools (It's a pain to re-attach to ducting every time), or does running it like this cause damage to the DE due to low air flow through the motor?
I then ran it through the soil pipe to the table saw, with 2 blast gates at exit of floor, so I can attach to planer too.
I got 763 m3/h so about 84% of the source flow, which ought to be plenty.
I then used one of these:
To run a 60mm hose to the top of the table saw. However the suction is very very weak indeed.
Question 2: Am I better of with a Y splitter, and then reducing one branch to 60mm and running it like that?
Whilst I was leaning on my table saw checking the flow, I noticed a pain in my thigh, occurring at regular intervals. Turned out it was regular electric shocks. Also my blast gates produced a 1" spark when I reached out to close one. (I have the aluminium ones).
So looks like some grounding is in order. I already get about 30-50 shocks a day, every door handle, every drawer handle, every tap, sometimes plain walls, concrete and even bits of wood. I wish it meant I had some super power, but "staticman" already describes me accurately for 10 hours a day.
I plan to try wrapping copper round the hoses / pipes, and at one end just screw to the DE base (I assume that's grounded, Q3, how can I tell?)
At the TS end, given the under concrete run, I guess I could just attach to the TS cabinet. Neither devices have marked earth screw locations, so not sure...
Also I might try stripping some of the hose wire, and tightening the jubilee clip over it, and then connect that with a short length at the end.
Any ideas on static would be great, it seems to cause as many sparks as sharpening or hand planes debates, but most of the sites I read were 'murrican...