Baileigh/Jet Air Cleaner

jeffinsgf said:
You're welcome. I've been enjoying mine. Can't believe how quiet it is and how much air it moves.

Thanks from me too, Jeff. I was polishing plexi-glass edges and with respirator, headphones and CT26 running I couldn't hear the fan speed until I stopped. I was pleased to see/hear that the Auto dust-sensing feature actually works.
 
If I were drawing up specs for a new house, number on on the design would be forced air heating and cooling.  So that I could breath filtered and humidity-controlled air 24/7.

I currently have hot water baseboard heat and separate air conditioning.  Between seasons, I open windows. 

I’ve made air filtration devices using box fans and furnace filters.  Judging from the amount of dust they collected, they did significant work on a low budget. 

I used two filters, a fiberglass (cheap) filter first, and then a 3M Filtrete filter.  The cheap furnace filter extended the life of the Filtrete filters and were replaced frequently.  I no longer have a darkroom in my basement so that system is “obsolete”. 
 
You're welcome. I've been enjoying mine. Can't believe how quiet it is and how much air it moves.
I had mine on for several hours today. It’s so quiet I almost forgot it was running. A little over a month in and still very happy with this purchase.
 
Add me to the list of those who have the Baileigh. I got it mounted up in my tiny space this weekend and, wow, is it quiet on level 1.
 
I got a CNC survey from Jet. Filling it out gets you entered to win a Jet air cleaner. If I win I hope they let me trade that in for something else like a discount on a lathe, or a power feeder or one of the many other tools I’d like from Jet/POWERMATIC.
 
I have a Stratus in the shop at work. It is completely ineffective, because I can't stand to be in the room when it is running. Even on low it's obnoxious. It can't filter if it isn't running. Thinking about asking the boss to let me get a Jet/Baleigh and put the Stratus on FBM.
 
Looks like it has the Dayton motor. Voltage conversion is super simple. If it's like mine, you might want to take the opportunity to put a longer cord on it.
It had a good twelve footer, so I swapped for a hospital plug and followed the diagram to convert it to 110. The first attempt it ran in reverse but there was a footnote on the diagram that revealed the easy fix. We're both thrilled with this saw. Today I was resawing some wide fir for Dutchmen (Dutchmans?) and it felt much more sane than ripping them on the tablesaw.
 
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