04-03-2016, 11:26 AM
Some people seal all their pipe joinery and are careful to eliminate all small leaks from their system. Others, myself included, don't take any special pains, just make good snug connections but no duct tape sealing, etc. Does anyone have any data suggesting that sealing all the joints significantly improves their system?
I wonder if people aren't confusing the requirements of a dust collection system with a vacuum system in which you are attempting to pull all the air out of an enclosed system. Clearly with the vacuum example, even tiny leak will be significant.
With a dust collection system you are pulling air through an open pipe, in my case 6" machine to cyclone. The amount of air that is moved is related to the cross sectional area of the pipe. If the system has a "y" and both pipes are open the amount of air pulled from each of the 2 open pipes is proportional to their cross sectional areas. If one of these is a 4" pipe and the other is a 6" pipe, the 6" pipe will pull something over twice as much air as the 4" pipe. Now consider a leak in the system. The leak is equivalent to another "y" with an open pipe end. But just in the case of the 4" and 6" pipe above, the amount of air drawn from the leak is proportional to its cross sectional area of the pipes in the system. Unless the leak was huge, like when I inadvertently leave several of my blast gates open, I don't think that leaks have any measurable impact on the efficiency of the system and that taking great pains to seal everything is not worth the effort. Yes, No?
I wonder if people aren't confusing the requirements of a dust collection system with a vacuum system in which you are attempting to pull all the air out of an enclosed system. Clearly with the vacuum example, even tiny leak will be significant.
With a dust collection system you are pulling air through an open pipe, in my case 6" machine to cyclone. The amount of air that is moved is related to the cross sectional area of the pipe. If the system has a "y" and both pipes are open the amount of air pulled from each of the 2 open pipes is proportional to their cross sectional areas. If one of these is a 4" pipe and the other is a 6" pipe, the 6" pipe will pull something over twice as much air as the 4" pipe. Now consider a leak in the system. The leak is equivalent to another "y" with an open pipe end. But just in the case of the 4" and 6" pipe above, the amount of air drawn from the leak is proportional to its cross sectional area of the pipes in the system. Unless the leak was huge, like when I inadvertently leave several of my blast gates open, I don't think that leaks have any measurable impact on the efficiency of the system and that taking great pains to seal everything is not worth the effort. Yes, No?