I've had a dust deputy deluxe kit for about 5 years now. It works great, keeps my dust collector mostly empty, etc..
The downside to it has always been emptying it, as the 5 gallon bucket fills up pretty quickly if I'm running a jointer or just processing a lot of material. It's always a cloud of dust no matter how delicately I approach the task.
Rather than buy a larger bin, I decided to get some biodegradable liners and then use some scrap to build a larger bin to accommodate it, fitted to the bag size. I just tested it out today and the first issue is that the liners basically collapse in the bin once there's a vacuum. That's probably not helping performance, though I don't know if it would cause more dust to be routed on to the vacuum.
I think I can deal with that by putting some sort of removable or disposable bracing in there. Oneida sells a solution for this problem, but it wouldn't fit my specific container.
The other aspect that I'm curious about is whether the top of the bin (where the cyclone attaches) would make any difference in performance/separation. The original has a thin bucket lid with a 3" hole for debris to drop into. Mine is a 1.5" thick top with a 3" hole for debris to drop into. I wouldn't expect that to impact the performance of the cyclone or negatively affect anything, but I don't really know much about the physics of how these separators work. Would this have any effect on the dust separation ability of the cyclone?
Thanks,
Adam
The downside to it has always been emptying it, as the 5 gallon bucket fills up pretty quickly if I'm running a jointer or just processing a lot of material. It's always a cloud of dust no matter how delicately I approach the task.
Rather than buy a larger bin, I decided to get some biodegradable liners and then use some scrap to build a larger bin to accommodate it, fitted to the bag size. I just tested it out today and the first issue is that the liners basically collapse in the bin once there's a vacuum. That's probably not helping performance, though I don't know if it would cause more dust to be routed on to the vacuum.
I think I can deal with that by putting some sort of removable or disposable bracing in there. Oneida sells a solution for this problem, but it wouldn't fit my specific container.
The other aspect that I'm curious about is whether the top of the bin (where the cyclone attaches) would make any difference in performance/separation. The original has a thin bucket lid with a 3" hole for debris to drop into. Mine is a 1.5" thick top with a 3" hole for debris to drop into. I wouldn't expect that to impact the performance of the cyclone or negatively affect anything, but I don't really know much about the physics of how these separators work. Would this have any effect on the dust separation ability of the cyclone?
Thanks,
Adam