-woodsman- said:Wow! [eek] That is the EHL 65, not to be a jerk I thought we wher talking about the HL 850 with a 27 mm hose fitting. The 850 has a larger chamber in frount of the hose port. This would give the fibres more room to fall into place before entering the hose. Does this happen to everyone with the 65? It seems the the elbow also gives things more time, by slowing them down, to bunch up before hitting the rim of the hose. Can anyone testify to using a 36 mm hose on the EHL 65? Testify! [not worthy] Testify! I cant belive I just said that. I bet the EHL 65 would be improved by the 36-27 mm reducer. I'm still wondering about the HL 850. I like the vid. Thats a hard balancing act. It looked like there might have been a video that didn't make the cut. Its amazing how fast and clean (clean meaning the cut not the hose packed with fibbers) these things cut. I have a co worker who has a 65 Ill ask his opinion on it. I do get a little bit of dust with my 850 connected to the 37 mm hose. Its minimal. Maby it cant be improved on but I'd still like to see what happens with the 27 mm downsizer.
waynelang2001 said:I have the 65 and i had this happen a few times, best thing i could add would be to slow down the cut abit to let less through the hose. That works pretty well for me. But im sure a bigger hose would be the way to go.
jmbfestool said:I cant see how at 27mm hose works on the HL 850 because the 27mm hose struggles with my EHL65 when I am planning Plywood face.
I havent ever used my HL850 on the 27mm cus of the reason it doesnt fit. I do need to get a 36mm hose though.
Ill do a video showing what happens to mine
JMB
egapeg said:"It seems the the elbow also gives things more time, by slowing them down, to bunch up before hitting the rim of the hose. "
I think that part of the problem is the elbow is causing the particles to all be hitting the lip of the hose at the same place, they then have to rebound off of the lip before getting sucked in, but before that happens another chip hits it back onto the lip.
IMO the hose should have a sharpish edge at the largest diameter which then tapers to the inside.
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Just a thought here - try cutting a piece of plastic - Credit Card thickness so that it is a snug fit inside the hose accross the diameter. Let it stick out a bit so that it more or less fits insde the elbow to where the bend is. Give it a kink towards the planer so that the plastic keeps the chips from hitting the rim and acts like a funnel.
Deansocial said:i always thought an adapter that goes over the outlet like the 36mm hose then into the 27mm hose so there is no ledge for chip to stick on
Corwin said:Deansocial said:i always thought an adapter that goes over the outlet like the 36mm hose then into the 27mm hose so there is no ledge for chip to stick on
You can easily make such an adapter. All you need is a short length of D36 hose and two of the D36 Tool End Fittings and simply install these fittings on either end of the length of D36 hose. The tool end of your D27 hose will fit into the end of this adapter. This is the same type setup as the Dave Ronyak adapter, except it is stepping up in size rather than stepping down. Since a length of D36 hose is rather costly for the short length needed, you might try asking your dealer if they could make one up for you as some dealers here now do for the Dave Ronyak adapter.
This will illustrate what I am talking about: Link to Post with Picture of Dave Ronyak Adapter
Deansocial said:Corwin said:Deansocial said:i always thought an adapter that goes over the outlet like the 36mm hose then into the 27mm hose so there is no ledge for chip to stick on
You can easily make such an adapter. All you need is a short length of D36 hose and two of the D36 Tool End Fittings and simply install these fittings on either end of the length of D36 hose. The tool end of your D27 hose will fit into the end of this adapter. This is the same type setup as the Dave Ronyak adapter, except it is stepping up in size rather than stepping down. Since a length of D36 hose is rather costly for the short length needed, you might try asking your dealer if they could make one up for you as some dealers here now do for the Dave Ronyak adapter.
This will illustrate what I am talking about: Link to Post with Picture of Dave Ronyak Adapter
think you misunderstood.
When using a 27mm hose it fits inside the tool outlet thus creating a ledge for stuff to gather on were with the 36mm hose this isnt the case(on the ehl65 at least)
if there was something that went over the tool part but slid inside the 27mm hose there would be no ledges