DBT85
Established Member
IIRC Mike Jordan once referred to anyone doing it with plastic ducting and home made blast gates as "penny pinching clowns".
My only motive for such abuse is to concentrate the minds of fellow woodworkers. The few pounds saved will be easily offset by the fact that your insurance will be negated by the increased fire risk from static and the total lack of fire resistance.
Using incorrect materials will provide your insurers with a great excuse to point out the elevated risk you created. It's quicker and easier to do it right!
You can't deny the truth of my statement can you.
A
Any actual evidence of your claims? or just the usual PVC causes explosions myth?My only motive for such abuse is to concentrate the minds of fellow woodworkers. The few pounds saved will be easily offset by the fact that your insurance will be negated by the increased fire risk from static and the total lack of fire resistance.
Using incorrect materials will provide your insurers with a great excuse to point out the elevated risk you created. It's quicker and easier to do it right!
as for MikeK's over expensive metal ducting....it could be a country specific price prob......
I just bought enough guttering for an average 3 bed detached house and it cost over €850 euros....just materials in plastic......
full body showers in a fiber glass screen assy is very cheap in France [about a 1/3 of the UK price]
but nuts n bolts are 5 times more expensive than the UK.....
brass plumbing fittings here are about 30-50%cheaper than the UK dont ask about France.....
it all in the geography I'm afraid.......
I like ur style MikeK more photos of the shop and ur fancy add on's please.....good for ideas.....
It’s not the risk of fire, I tend to agree with you on that Roy it’s the bloody big static shocks you can get off it if it isn’t earth that’s the real bugger.I would not get too hung up about static electric generation in your extraction systems, lifes to short and it will not shorten it any more unless you waste time thinking about the what if's. If it was carrying natural gas or flour then I would take it seriously but it is going to take some spark to ignite your wood dust in a home workshop, it has not got the power of the Haddron collider. Personally I do my best to minimise dust but always end up having to give the place a good hoover regularly as I prefer to make dust and not worry about controlling it to much.
For info this is worth a read on the subject, it’s very thorough.
Grounding PVC and Other Dust Collection Myths
I linked the same in post 28 but it is something worth repeating.
Pete
Sorry, my mistake, didn’t read the full thread thoroughly....I linked the same in post 28 but it is something worth repeating.
Pete
If I can inject a teeny bit of science in here?
The static comes from the wood chips scraping along the inside of the plastic pipe. Exactly the same effect as stroking a balloon across a woollen jumper and then sticking the balloon to a wall.
NONE of the pipes create static by themselves. The greater the flow speed, the more static produced.
Now, how are the pipes connected to the wall? if they are fixed with pipe clips, and you have left the rubber bumper pads on the clips, then the pipe is insulated.
If you have metal clips touching the pipe and then fixed to the wall in such a way that the metal clip stud is NOT insulated by a plastic wall plug you have earthed the pipe.
If the pipe goes into a metal container with a motor attached, its earthed through the mains lead.
So, most systems are earthed somewhere and will never produce shocks.
But if you have a powerful extraction system, into plastic hoses and plastic pipes and plastic cyclones, and the securing clips arent physically touching brick walls, guess what? you have static!
easy peasy innit?
On large installations I have heard of bare copper wire being threaded through the entire run and earthed through the pipe at each end.
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