Quote from: retired2 on July 18, 2017, 11:37:13 AMYou mean Cosmas? I did contact him to ask where he got the design for the side opening in the outlet tube (and how it worked) but I didn't get a particularly clear response.
I suggest you contact ??? and ask him how it is working. Only people that have tried it know for sure, and I don't know of anyone who has tried it.
I'm guessing it doesn't work. Good ideas spread fast, bad ones die quickly.
Unless you just love to experiment, I'd stick with a design that works.
Quote from: nucww on July 18, 2017, 09:26:52 PMThat's a good point. I was thinking of a double height top hat design - meaning the inlet would be flush with the underside of the separator chamber ceiling. I assume then that airflow coming in from the inlet shouldn't immediately lift material from the lower can even if there wasn't a closed area underneath. However, an easily replaceable baffle would allow the addition of a 120 degree wider area.
Too much opening leads to too much flow in the lower collector. I used a spiral design and only had about 30degrees closed. I was getting too much flow in the lower can. The dust in the lower can was all in the center rather than the outside. I closed it back to about 120 and it seems better. I agree with R2 stay with the 120. The turbulent entrance expands into the upper cavity before it has a chance to expand into the lower can.
Has anyone tried out different slot gap widths? I assume that a thin gap will plug with planer shavings, but is there a separation efficiency benefit of a thin gap for most normal cutting?
Quote from: dabullseye on July 19, 2017, 12:32:53 PM1/4" hard board would be easy to source, so that sounds fine.
i just use a 1/4" hard board that is beveled back on the bottom side. the slot where it meets the 120 degree section has radius on the end of slot and is smooth. when r2 was building his top hat i had suggested maybe bolting a rod to bottom of trash can so the baffle could rest against it. so thinking of your idea maybe you could make a sleeve that fits over the rod but has a magnet in it to hold baffle in place and then you could remove it to empty the can. but i believe in KISS method and would just go with the proven method and use the hardboard. ive never had a problem with mine
I was thinking of a tapped hole in the top of the pipe for a bolt, which would take a matter of seconds to remove.