I visited Camvac at lunchtime and chatted to Phillip the fella who represented the firm at Yandles last week.
Advice and conclusions as follows;
A single motor 63mm machine will easily handle dust from small machines, disc / bobbin sanders, bandsaw, small lathe, drill press etc over a reasonable run.
Having made the above comment, it seems a better option to buy the 100mm machine as this can easily be converted to handle 63mm hoses/ducting by fitting a plastic attachment to the outlet on the vacuum machine. This approach provides flexibility for the future.
The hose pipe fitted to the top of the machine deflects noise and reduces noise volume. A useful tip.
I am going to get a lid to try the dustbin idea which is designed to increase capacity for dust and chippings, not suck power. The theory is that dust and chippings enter the dustbin from say the P/T, heavier particles fall to the bottom, smaller particles remain higher in the bin as a vortex of air swirls round the bin with fine particles being sucked out to the storage attached to the vacuum. I am no vacuum engineer but does this sound logical?
I already have a single motor wall mounted 286 and Phillip thought this would be powerful enough to handle a dustbin type set-up. I will check this again just to be sure.
My plan based on the above is to install a new Camvac 336 single motor 100mm machine under the bench to attach directly to a range of small machines. I have some 63mm hose and may reduce this to make use of that hose. I am going to try and avoid a lot of ducting if I can.
A separate dedicated 100mm machine, for my P/T with an intermediate dustbin collector is the plan, single or twin motor to be decided. Housed outside like my current set-up in a cupboard on the wall of the workshop.
Hope I get this right!
Cheers, Tony.