Interesting concept. Would you do this on both ends of the slot or just the end farthest from the direction of rotation?
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Show posts MenuQuote from: retired2 on February 19, 2018, 06:40:02 AM
Your outlet neck is pretty long so it might need some stabilization, but I can't recall anyone mentioning vibration of the outlet. The turbulance and noise I was getting until I added the air straighteners was coming from the blower housing. I'm sure it was the effect of the turbulent air on the blades of the impeller. I never noticed any vibration or noise from the outlet pipe, but mine is very short compared to yours. And mine is connected to the blower with a few inches of flex hose, so that should isolate the blower from the separator from the blower or vica versa.
It's possible that your stiffener could act on the spinning air and cause some turbulance that would not be beneficial. I think I would try to avoid it, but build your separator in a way that allows you to add it later if needed. Another potential problem is long shavings getting hung up on the stiffener. My outlet neck has a pretty good layer of fines stuck to it from use over time, so waste does get attached to even a smooth pipe.
Quote from: retired2 on January 26, 2018, 12:36:36 PMInteresting points made here, I may try this as wel.l.. I'm contemplating making the outlet pipe long enough to experiment with flow, thank you for discussing this in my thread as it has given me additional food for thought as I proceed with my build.Quote from: alan m on January 26, 2018, 08:40:54 AM
not really a hard and fast rule. but it make sense.
as the separator height increases the outlet has to get longer to get the benefit .
so keeping to half the inlet height above the baffle makes sense
It may indeed work just fine, I had just never heard that rule of thumb. It does seem to produce reasonable locations for all but extreme cases. In fact, as my tests show the performance is not terribly sensitive to position. And ironically the best airflow was achieved when the bellmouth was closest to the baffle. It might be that in that position the air flow into the bellmouth was smoothed by the baffle.
Quote from: retired2 on January 25, 2018, 07:14:47 AM
There is test data in a table in the thread for my build, just below this post. It shows slight air flow differences between positions, but not much. As I recall separation did not change very much. I think there might be a photo in that thread showing the attachment of the bellmouth to a straight section of pipe.
Ordinarily, I would recomment putting your bellmouth flange at or slightly below the bottom of the inlet. However, you have a pretty tall inlet so I don't know if that is reasonable. Is your double high 20" tall? If so, my advice would be ok.
Quote from: kmerkle on June 08, 2017, 01:17:32 PM
Where did you get the bellmouth?