Michael Kellough said:
Dan Clark said:
CT22 with the top completely removed:
Regards,
Dan.
What was this about?
Is this an example of cork flooring we've been hearing so much about lately?
The cork flooring was very nice, but that wasn't the point of the photo. Brice, Ned, Dave, and I poked and prodded the CT for about 20 minutes. The CT22 had several features that I knew nothing about:
- The top can be completely removed. This makes it very easy to empty out if you have a bag failure.
-The "Dust Trap"
"Dirt Trap" bucket can be very useful when using the CT as a wet vac because you can just lift out the pail and empty it. (Use the
Wet Filter Elements in place of your standard filter elements.)
- Below the CT motor is the exhaust plenum. This routes the exhaust from the hepa filters out the side of the vac. It's NOT obvious, but it's got foam noise reducers built in. (Look in the Exhaust Port.)
- When you raise the vac lid, a little trap door closes off access to the vac exhaust pleanum so that dust and dirt doesn't get down in the exhaust plenum. Slowly raise the CT top and watch the trap close off.
- It's not obvious until you look closely, but the CT has two separate air paths. The most obvious is the path from the hose to the bag, through the hepa filters, down through the exhaust plenum, and then out throught the Exhaust Port and vents. The less obvious is a second air path for the motor. It draws in air through a completely separate vent and out through a complete separate vent. (Apparently some Fein vac users think that Fein is the only one that does that.)
- The exhaust port on the left has some useful features. When you plug a hose in there, it shuts off the other two vents above it and you can run it outside so that dust doesn't blow around. Exhaust Port and vents:
Hose in Exhaust Port:
One thing this examination proved was the depth of Festool engineering. There are a large number if very nice, very sophisticated features in Festool products that are hidden away inside.
I'll post more pics this evening.
Regards,
Dan.