Misterdog
Established Member
'Swept' elbows create less drag.
https://www.plastics-express.co.uk/...-87c2b0-single-socket-bend-28swept29-p-pte354
https://www.plastics-express.co.uk/...-87c2b0-single-socket-bend-28swept29-p-pte354
In a DIY scenario, you aren't bringing anything on to the market i.e. you are not selling the system, I don't see it how any of the directives could be made to apply in law.However the point still remains whether this legislation would be extended to a DIY scenario. I think that will require a serious event, which I am sure we can all agree that we do not want to happen.
In a DIY scenario, you aren't bringing anything on to the market i.e. you are not selling the system, I don't see it how any of the directives could be made to apply in law.
What do you think?
I was in IT equipment manufacturing certification, so different ways of injuring and killing people, I produced many bespoke systems which were sold.
There is scope within the directives to sell a product without approvals, if it is a prototype and if you don't produce many. The customer must obviously understand what they are buying. This wouldn't waive your requirement to make sure it's safe, so whilst you can, it exposes you to risk if something goes wrong. You could do a self certification, but that generally isn't worth the paper it's printed on, just box ticking,
I could see a few apparent ways round the legislation, but all of them expose the company to risk.
If all that fails, you just sell it on the internet from the far east!!
Absolutely!'Swept' elbows create less drag.
https://www.plastics-express.co.uk/...-87c2b0-single-socket-bend-28swept29-p-pte354
Haha. Thanks, It looks so much better and is nicer to use when tidy but it's definitely hard to keep it that way!Walcote,
Please don't apologise for the 'mess' - that is operating theatre clean and tidy !!
Great looking workshop. Hopefully mine will look like that soon. I'm currently making blast gates for a 110mm underground pvc system and plan to earth the pipes as you have yours. How are you heating your workshop?Is there much consideration for 4" vent pipe? I recently made a system with 1 10m run and 3 drops and the 4" vent pipe was at least 50% cheaper than any other solution I looked at such as Soil Pipe and Galv. I was worried about static so have a bare copper wire running internally the length of the duct to ground and I have had no shock personally and no indication of static build up so far. It took a little more invention as there are not so many off the shelf dust extraction parts for it so I 3D printed and Laser cut gates and various fittings but they could easily have been done with basic woodworking skills. If anyone is interested, let me know and I'll post the 3D files online. I will be replacing the remaining 90 degree turn with 2 45s when I get a chance. The only downside was I couldn't find an unequal Y joint so it has T joints for the drops. Not ideal but it works brilliantly with whatever drop in efficiency not causing a problem. I'm interested to hear what others think of the solution and hope no one is going to tell me the big reason it was all a bad idea!!View attachment 99627
Please excuse the mess! I am sorting through a bunch of stuff.
Great looking workshop. Hopefully mine will look like that soon. I'm currently making blast gates for a 110mm underground pvc system and plan to earth the pipes as you have yours. How are you heating your workshop?
Having seen that Paul is of the opinion that insurance companies could well apply commercial legislation requirements to DIY extraction systems, where does that place the amateur using machinery from a bygone era. We all take care of ourselves as far as possible with guards and the likes but I am thinking of the bandsaw as an example where modern machines in the industrial world will have a brake to stop the blade quickly. The same will apply with many other machines where i understand dc injection into a 3 ph motor will stop it pretty quickly.
I won't tell you you did wrong but going forward I will tell you your plan to change from the 90º to a pair of 45º fittings won't improve anything. As a 90º with what looks to be a 0.75R or smaller, you have an equivalent drag of 37'/11.28M of straight pipe. A 45 elbow has an equivalent of 20'/6.1M so making the turn with two is 40'/12.52M plus whatever straight piece between. Want to call it 41'/12.5M? That improvement is going backward. Now if you can find an elbow with a radius of 1.5R (maybe from one of the other types of pipe you can get even if it means a little cutting/grinding to make it fit) you will have a 17'/5.18M equivalent of straight pipe. Those numbers come from page 54 of http://www.lorencook.com/PDFs/Catalogs/Cookbook_Catalog.pdf
Taking the T fitting out and replacing with a couple 45º fitting will make a big improvement because the T has a straight duct equivalent of 125'/38.1M. That coming from 6A on page 61 on the link above. If you want a template calculator for cutting the pieces to make a 45º branch fitting. Pipe Joint Template Software
My metric equivalents are rounded up/down a bit.
Pete
Leaks in the runs are another way to loose lots of efficiency too, so make sure your joints are air tight.
Mind, you need to ensure also that you have enough air to hit the transport velocity to carry the waste all the way to the filter. Not such a problem if your duct is all the same size and you only use one machine, so only one gate open at a time, as long as you have the velocity at the most extreme point you should be fine.
With respect to the MD, it specifically includes equipment designed and built for one's own use.
Now yes these pieces of legislation are aimed at businesses, but this is not defined in the legislation.
In the MD & LVD, there is no legitimate means for placing a device on the market if it is not compliant.
However, both of these are self-certification apart from certain safety devices, and LEV is borderline.
One could ignore the legislation and EHSR's and just put the CE mark on and sell it, the chances of getting caught are slim, and this would expose the company to risk.
However, any conscientious engineer or professional should never consider such if they have any sort of moral compass.
I don't believe that your last comment is serious surely?
Try to keep flexy to a minimum. The losses are immense. I can’t recall the figures but it is something like 1m of flexy is the equivalent of 30m of longitudinally seamed steel. I am more than happy to be corrected if someone else has the exact figures.
I have limited resources stuck in my hospital bed!
Yes the procedure is to calculate the individual losses for the linear sections by material and the individual bends and fittings and any flexy, then add them to get the total lossess.Happy New Year Paul.
The losses approach to 3 to 1 as a rule of thumb. The closest to exact figures that come to mind at the moment is this online duct friction loss calculator. On-Line Duct Friction Loss You can play with different sizes and lengths of ducts and materials to get the static pressure loss in inches of water. It doesn't have the metric option you would be more likely to have worked with but I'm pretty sure you can figure it out. Once you get a result you can go back and change it to a different duct material to see how much of a change there is. I suppose in a mixed material system one would figure out the different areas and add the results together for a total.
When one realizes a small DC only has 5 or 6 inches of static pressure with no flow and only a couple when wide open it shows why many small shops have so much dust everywhere.
Pete
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