
Liberated a Dyson DC01 vacuum cleaner the other day (next door neighbours chuck-out, nothing wrong with it except clogged filters). It has a dual cyclone, so I thought it might be possible to do something with it:
Took it apart and washed all the bits:

Made a base from 12mm birch ply to fit the top of the CT22, like a systainer, then screwed the bin to the base:

Cut the top off the uppermost (silver grey coloured) moulding. Tape shows the top of the box needs to be around 310mm from the base.

Upper assembly mounted on top board. The position is fairly critical as the inlet needs to be accessible. I mutilated a piece of aluminium beyond all recognition to make the inlet duct, which has to go from round to rectangular section. Plenty of silicone sealant to bond it in place, and the pipe clip helps. (The 3 little yellow things are air valves, which I think are something to do with balancing the air pressures between the 1st and 2nd stage cyclones, so I left them in position)

Same again, but with a piece of ply added to support the hose which goes to the top of the cyclone. The 90 bend at the top is a standard 40mm waste pipe fitting, as is most of the other pipework.

View inside (actually taken after a little test). I cut 4 large apertures around the bottom of the clear polycarbonate bin, to allow all the debris to fill the box. The bin on it's own is not big enough of course, but it would be difficult to do away with it completely as it supports all the rest of the assembly. This is the bit I'm not sure about - the bin might clog up before the box gets completely full, so I may have to think again.

The complete set-up. The extra pipework consists of the original dyson hose, some 40mm plastic waste pipe and fittings, and a short length of 50mm waste (plus reducer) to fit the CT22 inlet pipe. Total cost around ?12 for the plumbing fittings, plus some offcuts of ply. That's around the same price as 2 dust bags.
