HM, as you found out, there were a couple of things that help. As DBhost pointed out, and you corrected, you need some space between the inlet and the bottom baffle. One thing I did on my inlet pipe was to take it to the band saw and cut it off 1/2" above the top horizontal of the inlet. It left me with sloping inlet, and I used my jigsaw set at the approximate (well eyeballed) angle of the slope when cutting the inlet opening into the top baffle. Some work with a rasp took care or any binding and a fair amount of hot melt glue took care of any discrepancies. This gave me a much more angled entry into the top.
I used an angled (all this was 4" stuff) dust port (Woodcraft - 4" Universal Fitting Item #144654) over the inlet, and this allowed me to clear the bottom of my 50-760 (YA 50-760 build), and this looked to be a smoother entry than just using a 90 elbow. That said, as much as possible I will do top hat builds from now on to eliminate bends and the standoffs between the top and the bottom of the baffle, since if I use it to pick up shavings from hand planes and off the lathe, they now have a tendency to catch on anything in the air stream.
I know this is an older post, but I've seen my mistake of butting the bottom of the baffle to inlet made by others in newer posts, and hopefully the mods you, dbhost, and others to get the inlet off of the bottom baffle may need to be emphasized. Not a problem for just dust collection, but a definite hangup when sucking up shavings (Obviously, I'm too lazy to just pick them up with a broom and dustpan). I know from experience when the shavings start piling up at the inlet, they are getting sucked up into the dust collector and jamming as well in the body of the dust collector.
When I get around to getting another section of all thread (the originals have been cut too short to drop the bottom), I'll leave them long enough to play with trying to find the best height for them to drop into the bottom baffle cutout.
JT
I used an angled (all this was 4" stuff) dust port (Woodcraft - 4" Universal Fitting Item #144654) over the inlet, and this allowed me to clear the bottom of my 50-760 (YA 50-760 build), and this looked to be a smoother entry than just using a 90 elbow. That said, as much as possible I will do top hat builds from now on to eliminate bends and the standoffs between the top and the bottom of the baffle, since if I use it to pick up shavings from hand planes and off the lathe, they now have a tendency to catch on anything in the air stream.
I know this is an older post, but I've seen my mistake of butting the bottom of the baffle to inlet made by others in newer posts, and hopefully the mods you, dbhost, and others to get the inlet off of the bottom baffle may need to be emphasized. Not a problem for just dust collection, but a definite hangup when sucking up shavings (Obviously, I'm too lazy to just pick them up with a broom and dustpan). I know from experience when the shavings start piling up at the inlet, they are getting sucked up into the dust collector and jamming as well in the body of the dust collector.
When I get around to getting another section of all thread (the originals have been cut too short to drop the bottom), I'll leave them long enough to play with trying to find the best height for them to drop into the bottom baffle cutout.
JT