I got nervous when you were hanging the unit onto the wall; didn't want you to lose your balance on that ladder. Laughed out loud when your son asked, "You need any help there?" What a guy! Got nervous again at 30 minutes in when you were running your jointer. A point of advice if you don't mind: your hands should never ride directly over the blades, even though they are on top of the wood and the guard is in place. Keeps your hands at least 3 inches away from the blades at ALL times. Use a push stick. If your pushing hand slips and the heal of your palm goes into the blades you will have a VERY bad day. Sorry for being a dad. On my Dust Deputy I used a large 30 gal. Brute trash can. I cut a hole in the lid and bolted it down to it using foam tape for insulation. Works very well. Anyway, I called Rockler this morning; my equipment should arrive today. Thanks for a great instructional video; it really helped. Take care.
@terrykizer67553 жыл бұрын
Love it that you include your son! Your shop is looking great.
@MyGarageWorkshop3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. Been thinking about getting this unit for some time. I think the cyclone was a good idea. Nice, neat, shop. I like the wooden floors.
@spindlesworkshop97444 жыл бұрын
that is so cool that you teach your boy how to work!
@jerryprovencher20473 жыл бұрын
Nicely done! I like your shop
@Golfexpertbelieveme3 жыл бұрын
im not going to read through all of the comments so maybe someone has already said this. But I would shorten up your white tubing so there isn't so much slack. If you can I would run PVC from the deputy to the 1250. But atleast shorten up that one tubing. That will provide you with more CFM. Nice video.
@navarroedwards80312 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. I really learned a lot. Tell have you tried your dust right 1250 on your compound miter saw and how did it work for you?
@Chuck_Burke2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for taking the time to produce the video...you DID indeed answer a lot of questions, but if I may respectfully offer a suggestion. Cut the fluff. Most of us know how to install a battery and we know we get it from the store. We do NOT need to see you wrap your cord around your planer...or your jointer...NOR do we need to see you put them away... I loved the video, again these are just respectful suggestions to maybe help you improve your channel...and it's just me...maybe other people like the fluff. Thank you again for taking the time to produce the video...you did answer my questions about the dust deputy....
@organize19794 жыл бұрын
love your shop and your videos!
@bobbg90414 жыл бұрын
Hey, tip if you dont have an adapter to drive a bolt, a 1/4" extension fits into a 3/8" drill chuck. I do it all the time.
@LoneOakWoodworks4 жыл бұрын
Every bend creates restriction, especially with flex hose, and you've got about 540 degrees of unnecessary bend in that white hose. Cut that sucker to go straight from the collector to the cyclone and you'll see a big jump in cfm. When you go to empty the canister it won't hurt to have a couple of pounds of plastic cyclone hanging on the hose. :) I'm going to take my Jet DC 1100 apart soon and wall mount it with a cyclone and can underneath, along with using the Dust Right hose and quick connects similar to what you have there, makes a nice in between setup if you don't feel like piping the whole shop...
@singlefather014 жыл бұрын
It is bugging you, isn't it? Can you imagine if he runs the planer without a helical cutter? It can clog right at the bend....
@bbfoto72484 жыл бұрын
@DSDesign Woodworking @Alex Quiroz Agreed, you are kind of wasting the money that you invested for a good dust collection system if you gimp it by severely reducing its power and efficiency.
@richh75394 жыл бұрын
Hi Alex, I am considering purchasing this Dust Right Dust Collector with the canister and converting into a two stage system. Would you have any recommendations/regrets? Secondly, if you had to purchase a dust collector again would this be your choice?
@cswatson48232 жыл бұрын
Links to this equipment would be nice in your write up. Thank for the good video
@patswayze249310 ай бұрын
Does this mean the shop vac system didnt keep up?
@randygarza1864 жыл бұрын
So 8 months later, how is it working? Would you go this route again? Actually considering this same set up, have you done anything else to it?
@navarroedwards80312 жыл бұрын
How did your dust collection system work on your compound miter saw ?
@CJICantLie3 жыл бұрын
Tell your son those are awesome Sonic socks.
@jphomebrew Жыл бұрын
What height are you top lag bolts at? Do you like the height?
@billdussault37944 жыл бұрын
Get the canister, but if you do get a cyclone separator, the bag is too small with the canister. mine filled up immediately. Also, it is not convertible to 220v
@bobbg90414 жыл бұрын
Ok you can upgrade that with a large area hepa filter. This is way better the a wet dry vac you did before. If you pipe it in use 6" ducting. Seriously read onidas page on duct size. Dont spend money on the wrong things agine you'll spend more money correcting it later. Hey how big is that shop looks bigger then the first dust collection system.
@bbfoto72484 жыл бұрын
@bobbg The new shop is 16ft x32ft.
@MrJKellerLewis4 жыл бұрын
Nice video. I'm surprised you didn't cut down the clear hose and mount the oneida to the wall
@AlexQuiroz4 жыл бұрын
Very soon to make the adjustments John! Thanks for the tip. It will look a lot cleaner once I figure out where I want the Oneida to remain permanently
@bbfoto72484 жыл бұрын
@John Lewis @Alex Quiroz Yep, Free up your Floor Space and get that canister and Dust Deputy up high on the wall with a short length of tube between the fan housing & the separator. Or follow my tip and put the entire system outside in an attached "Lean-To" shed like you had at your old shop. Put your Air Compressor out there as well. ;) And I would definitely get a larger canister if you do a lot of planing and joining. Great system, though! Night & Day from a smaller Shop-Vac type.
@webcrawler33324 жыл бұрын
Great vid Alex! Do you have a vid of the dust management on your hitachi miter saw? I would like to see that, I have the same saw.
@anthonyarnold5544 жыл бұрын
I need to upgrade my system. The dust rite 1250 is my front runner. I’m also thinking of using the canister filter for the healthiest possible air. Are you considering the canister filter? Thanks for doing this thorough review!
@dougprentice13633 жыл бұрын
Absolutely go with Wynne canister filter.
@ncbible15754 жыл бұрын
Very helpful thank you. Your last name is the same as my gunny in the corps. Was your dad maybe a jarhead?
@AwesomeRedKite4 жыл бұрын
do you just run this on a normal 15a circuit?
@insideout1442 жыл бұрын
How about do another review after a year of use
@billrichardson80984 жыл бұрын
Nice shop good video! Tnx
@heuwel4 жыл бұрын
What happened to your "old" dust vacuum system ie the piping etc??
@donshelton73324 жыл бұрын
I'm curious too. My guess is there was too much friction from the sawdust and not enough air velocity from the shopvac to move the sawdust/chips. I've used short runs of 2.5" pipe for multiple sanding operations successfully with a 5 hp shopvac. I do appreciate his efforts! Don't know if you don't try. Lots of info available designing D.C. systems.
@bbfoto72484 жыл бұрын
@@donshelton7332 Yeah, with a shop-vac type system, the shorter and straighter the pipe runs, the better. Also try to reduce the amount of flexible corrugated vac hose used in the system. Air travels much more efficiently through the smooth pipe compared to the turbulence that corrugated hose creates. Use a larger pipe for your main runs and only reduce the diameter at the tool port.
@STV-H4H4 жыл бұрын
I’m guessing that he decided it sucked. And not in a thorough sucking way. The video fully displayed that even at the first gate, it didn’t (couldn’t? ) suck that plastic bag with any proper hoovering (reminds one of chrome trailer hitch jokes) ability. And at the last suction point it was equally lite weight suction. This video very clearly shows almost zero evidence that the intricate piping system was deleted, all that remains is the craftsman vac in a brief sad lonely instant while the long drawn out narration and sluggish test of both the tools as they were painstakingly brought to the stage, used, returned to their proper place and minute by minute boredom of the final result glacially revealed that this system is cleary better than the previous.
@mghtymous214 жыл бұрын
Did you have the planer and the dust right running off the same circuit breaker?
@dougprentice13633 жыл бұрын
Dust collector is on its own, decicated circuit.
@dennismacwilliams1964 жыл бұрын
Good video
@9avedon4 жыл бұрын
What is the Impeller size of the 1250 CFM ?
@2shoestoo4 жыл бұрын
Almost have to use a step stool to use the Jointer
@bbfoto72484 жыл бұрын
@Alex Quiroz Nice shop, Alex. Congrats! I posted this in your New Shop Tour video, but here are some tips that you could potentially apply to your new shop: 1. Build an Attached Exterior Box or "Attached Outhouse" on the exterior wall of your shop to house the Dust Collection Unit, similar to how you see some older homes with a small attached exterior "outhouse" for their water heater tank on an exterior wall of the house or garage. Like your "Lean-To" shed on your former shop. This keeps 90% of the NOISE OUTSIDE, which is great when filming your KZbin demo videos, and in general for a quieter and more pleasant everyday working environment! Place the exterior "vac house" under your shop's existing exterior roof eaves and built it out a bit to accommodate its size if needed. It would probably be less than $100 to construct: Pour a small concrete pad/foundation, frame with some pressure-treated 2x4s, sheath with the same exterior siding your shop has, add a standard inexpensive 30"-36" door for easy access to dump the sawdust canister/bag, and top it with a simple sloped plywood roof that matches the roof pitch and add tar paper & matching shingles on top. Make sure to leave plenty of air openings for fresh air supply to the vacuum system. You can use cheap exterior louvered eave vents that have window screen on the back side to keep out critters and insects. Place the vents up high and under the shop's roof eaves for maximum weather protection if possible. You could potentially place the dust collection shed on the outside wall right where you have already placed your dedicated outlet for it...just turn the outlet box around and face it to the outside. Use standard PVC or ABS pipe (I recommend lightweight inexpensive sewer pipe) to come through the exterior wall and into the shop for easy hookup to the main vacuum dust extraction port. Fill the openings well around the through-wall pipe penetrations with Great Stuff Expanding Foam and/or a good exterior silicone caulk. The power switch could obviously be placed on an interior wall, and/or you could get one of the inexpensive wireless remote controls to turn it on & off. ;) I've done this for both my Dust Collection system AND for my Air Compressor, and my shop is SO much more pleasant to work in without all of the noise! It's a simple and relatively inexpensive weekend project. 2. I always place my lumber racks & lumber/materials storage just inside the main access doors. It makes it MUCH EASIER to load it into the shop. It's especially nice that you have the large shop doors! Why struggle to carry & haul all of your lumber through the entire length of the shop and around all sorts of obstacles just to have to bring it back to your table saw's or miter saw's position??? From the lumber storage area near the entry, all of your shop's power tools and work surfaces (including wall-mounted tools & clamps) should be laid out to follow a logical progression and process: ---> Rough Cutting/Sheet Goods Breakdown ---> Planing/Jointing ---> Cut to Final Dimensions (Miter saw or Table saw) ---> Joinery/Dowelling/Biscuits ---> Glue-up/Assembly/Clamping ---> Sanding ---> Finishing, etc. The following video is excellent and covers the topics regarding SHOP LAYOUT, WORKFLOW, & EFFICIENCY... kzbin.info/www/bejne/a6rYomZqfbZ0msU ALSO, I know that you want to provide as much detail as possible, but really try to cut, edit, and reduce repetitive statements AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE so that your videos are shorter. Ideally under 30 minutes. As close as you can get to a video that is "1, 2, 3, BOOM, you're done!", while including all of the NECESSARY details, the more viewers and subscribers you'll have. :-) Looking forward to watch your process with the new shop!
@STV-H4H4 жыл бұрын
Agreed. The wasted watch time while you set up the jointer, drag the hose, hook it up, while narrating the obvious. Do the jointer test, turn it off, drag the hose away, put the jointer back in its place, blab some more, go get the planer, set it in place, set the wheel locks, chattering all the while, again walking back to retrieve the hose, hook it up and run the board thru, turn it off, drag the hose back to the starting point (but didn’t bother to again attach it to its proper hanger thingy!) and again put the planer away and so on. It’s suggestive of an hourly employee (but you must get paid by the minute by KZbin (?lol) dragging their feet to milk the clock. Your shop is painfully clean, I’m going out on a limb, could you be a tad OCD? I fully appreciate a clean work area and can’t ever actually achieve that objective but yours is the second cleanest wood shop on KZbin. Shorten the videos please, why spend 30 minutes demonstrating what can be better accomplished in 10?
@SendItBilly4 жыл бұрын
What brand remote is that?
@SendItBilly4 жыл бұрын
Bump
@50plymouths4 жыл бұрын
How big is your shop?
@AlexQuiroz4 жыл бұрын
Hey Robert! It’s 16’ x 32’. 512 sq ft.
@50plymouths4 жыл бұрын
Alex Quiroz sweet I’m thinking of getting a 16x32 or 16x36 myself... that shop looks like a great size for a hobby wood shop
@AlexQuiroz4 жыл бұрын
Awesome Robert! The longer you have for a shop the better it is in my opinion. Wide is great but most projects require length. Table saw, miter saw, jointer and planer. And the longer you have the more ability to maneuver tools around. Good luck with your shop! Of course as we all know, our shops will never be big enough! Haha!
@50plymouths4 жыл бұрын
I have a 55 gallon barrel for my super dust deputy cyclone... I really want to get the 1250cfm dust right wall mounted dust collector.. but most likely I will end up getting the harbor freight 2hp 1500cfm collector and modifying it to mount on the wall of my shop once I can afford it 👍🏻
@bbfoto72484 жыл бұрын
@@50plymouths @Alex Quiroz This is an excellent video and applies to any size shop... kzbin.info/www/bejne/a6rYomZqfbZ0msU
@bobbg90414 жыл бұрын
I cant pick up a stud finder, it just goes off all the time.
@edcable27113 жыл бұрын
He said size d.. lol . Try 9v
@hswing114 жыл бұрын
Very hjgh prices for a online service better to shop around............
@navarroedwards80312 жыл бұрын
How did your dust collection system work on your compound miter saw ?