ear3 said:
Would having this separator make a specialty vac like the CT36AC less necessary when doing larger amounts of drywall sanding, because it would reduce the amount going into the main body of the vac and the filter?
This is why I bought my Oneida UDD in the first place, for ANY finer dust sanding, wood, drywall, plaster etc. Unlike another posters comments, I don't feel I EVER had to 'cobble' something together with it to make it work, and my unit is a VERY early one. Oneida gave us the upgrade kit a few years after I had been using mine on multiple Festool Vacs with no issues at all. They wanted it installed, so I complied with some of it since it couldn't hurt my usage[ Ground straps were added on the sides of the lower tub and the Cyclone went from transparent plastic to Black Plastic... I miss the 'show' of swirling dust from my original Cyclone... [wink]]
I DO believe that my choice of using a Festool AS Boom Hose helps in controlling static build-up, but I bought it with 2 purposes, to allow putting a Systainer or Sortainer under the UDD, on top of my vac, by having that longer 50mm Boom hose in place of what Oneida sent with the original kit AND add Anti-Static grounding if I wasn't sure about the hose the kit came with. For Me, it's been a WIN WIN with the UDD all these years.
Drywall and Plaster sanding is a non-issue, it all just works, including using my Planex sander.
Moving the whole Vac unit up and down stairs means you break it down into smaller chunks with the UDD simply coming off, then reassemble it once you're ready. Not hard, and not heavy.
I hope the new Festool unit works as well for anyone who buys it.