Quote from: dbhost on January 01, 2022, 07:29:31 PMIt has no cone. It came with a ramp that pushed incoming air downwards, but I removed it when the baffle was installed. The chimney was added because there was no cone. Note the increase in airflow when the chimney diameter increased from 6 to 8 inches. A 12 in. chimney would be less restrictive.
I am unsure about that Penn State unit you measured against though, does it lack any sort of cone, or inside anything in the ring?
Quote from: dbhost on January 01, 2022, 07:29:31 PM
I might just have to soucre up 10' of 5" and see if I can't measure pre and post baffle airflow with the cone. I REALY want to know...
I don't think a measurement made at the impeller intake is meaningful since that is not how the unit will be used. If you are using 4" flex hose to your tools, the tool end of the hose is where you should measure the airflow. If you attach the 4 in. hose to a reducer (increaser) with perhaps a short length of 6" duct, the airflow will remain the same but the velocity will drop, perhaps low enough that you can measure it with your instrument. The instrument will partially block the duct end, so the measurement won't be very accurate but it will allow you to compare different measurements as you change your system.
Skip the 10' of 5" duct because your measurements can't be compared to those I made with a pitot tube.
Last photo shows 1.5 HP Penn State DC at left and the HF DC at right with the stock impeller. After testing the airflow, I returned the HF unit. The center DC is the 2 HP Grizzly unit I used for my tests last year http://www.jpthien.com/smf/index.php?topic=1426.0