Posted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 11:11 am
Hi all,
This is a repost from my garage shelving thread, but I thought it made sense to include here too.
====
I've received my dust collection cyclonic separator designed to fit onto a RIDGID shop vacuum. On the particular model vacuums it's meant for (WD1665/WD1670), the motor is detachable to use as a blower. They made use of this and provided a way for the motor to attach to the cyclonic assembly like so:
[ATTACH]1820[/ATTACH]
The nice thing about this is that it reuses the vacuum's collection canister so it can be easily rolled around the shop on its casters. The cyclone separates the collected bits into the canister, and the clean air is pulled straight up and through the U into the filter chamber. Since virtually everything has been sent into the canister except for clean air, the filter in the filter box doesn't get dirty and doesn't clog up.
Here is a view from a different angle:
[ATTACH]1821[/ATTACH]
You can see the big square box which is the filter box. A standard RIDGID filter mounts in that box and provides final filtration for air being pulled into the motor and exhausted into the shop. I put a fine filtration filter in there since I don't need to worry about plugging it up with sawdust. There is even an observation window on the top of the filter box:
[ATTACH]1822[/ATTACH]
although it's not much fun to look in since the filter stays clean all the time.
How well does it work? Well, I generated about 1/3 a canister's worth of sawdust during the birdhouse project. There is not a spec of dust, not even fine dust, on the filter in the filter box. The cyclonic separation works exceptionally well. As cuts are made, you can actually see the spiral of sawdust make its way down into the collection canister. It's really neat to watch. The end of the hose slips right into the dust collection port on the Shopsmith. It probably doesn't have the collection power of larger dedicated dust collectors, but it works extremely well for me. The cyclonic separator is designed to be hung by the PVC U pipe on the top, so I put a bike hook on the ceiling by the Shopsmith and I hang the separator out of the way while the shop vacuum performs its normal shop/floor cleaning duties.
You can read more about the RIDGID Conversion Lid at this link.
Please feel free to ask any questions!
- Chris
This is a repost from my garage shelving thread, but I thought it made sense to include here too.
====
I've received my dust collection cyclonic separator designed to fit onto a RIDGID shop vacuum. On the particular model vacuums it's meant for (WD1665/WD1670), the motor is detachable to use as a blower. They made use of this and provided a way for the motor to attach to the cyclonic assembly like so:
[ATTACH]1820[/ATTACH]
The nice thing about this is that it reuses the vacuum's collection canister so it can be easily rolled around the shop on its casters. The cyclone separates the collected bits into the canister, and the clean air is pulled straight up and through the U into the filter chamber. Since virtually everything has been sent into the canister except for clean air, the filter in the filter box doesn't get dirty and doesn't clog up.
Here is a view from a different angle:
[ATTACH]1821[/ATTACH]
You can see the big square box which is the filter box. A standard RIDGID filter mounts in that box and provides final filtration for air being pulled into the motor and exhausted into the shop. I put a fine filtration filter in there since I don't need to worry about plugging it up with sawdust. There is even an observation window on the top of the filter box:
[ATTACH]1822[/ATTACH]
although it's not much fun to look in since the filter stays clean all the time.
How well does it work? Well, I generated about 1/3 a canister's worth of sawdust during the birdhouse project. There is not a spec of dust, not even fine dust, on the filter in the filter box. The cyclonic separation works exceptionally well. As cuts are made, you can actually see the spiral of sawdust make its way down into the collection canister. It's really neat to watch. The end of the hose slips right into the dust collection port on the Shopsmith. It probably doesn't have the collection power of larger dedicated dust collectors, but it works extremely well for me. The cyclonic separator is designed to be hung by the PVC U pipe on the top, so I put a bike hook on the ceiling by the Shopsmith and I hang the separator out of the way while the shop vacuum performs its normal shop/floor cleaning duties.
You can read more about the RIDGID Conversion Lid at this link.
Please feel free to ask any questions!
- Chris