I have a 6 X 10 X 4 inch deep box behind the blade on my RAS. it sits
just beside and to the rear of the column. It sucks with only a 2"
hose. I also collect sawdust from the output on the blade guard. Works
pretty well, but the hose on the blade guard gets in the way now and
then.
Pete Stanaitis
------------------------
[email protected] wrote:
> I recently purchased a Craftsman RAS and a hd shop vac.
> After hooking up the vac hose to the exhaust port on the RAS I was
> quite disappointed to see all the sawdust flying out the front of the
> blade.
> Any ideas on how to contain the dust using the vac?
On 12/25/08 12:55 PMDec 25, "[email protected]"
<[email protected]> wrote:
> I recently purchased a Craftsman RAS and a hd shop vac.
> After hooking up the vac hose to the exhaust port on the RAS I was
> quite disappointed to see all the sawdust flying out the front of the
> blade.
> Any ideas on how to contain the dust using the vac?
What do you mean when you say that the sawdust flied out the front? Do you
really mean out the back (that part away from you)?
I built a hood out of some thin plywood and connected my dust collector to
the that. It helps quite a bit, but radial arm saws tend to throw sawdust
everywhere.
[email protected] wrote:
> I recently purchased a Craftsman RAS and a hd shop vac.
> After hooking up the vac hose to the exhaust port on the RAS I was
> quite disappointed to see all the sawdust flying out the front of the
> blade.
> Any ideas on how to contain the dust using the vac?
A RAS should toss very little sawdust out the front. Do you have your blade
on backwards? The teeth should be pointing down on the leading edge of the
blade so that they cut downward and force the wood being cut back towards
the fence when you pull the carriage forward to cut.
To use the vac, just stick the hose end in the area on the blade guard meant
to receive it. You may need an adapter depending on hole/hose sizes.
--
dadiOH
____________________________
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
[email protected] wrote:
> I recently purchased a Craftsman RAS and a hd shop vac.
> After hooking up the vac hose to the exhaust port on the RAS I was
> quite disappointed to see all the sawdust flying out the front of the
> blade.
> Any ideas on how to contain the dust using the vac?
There should be a piece on the back of the guard that can adjust up or
down for the thickness of the wood you are cutting. It acts as a scoop
to direct the dust into the outlet of the guard.
It doesn't work very well, however. On mine, I put a collector behind
the fence to catch what the guard misses.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com
[email protected]
---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply
> I have the Sears dust collector for the saw, which is a plastic hood that bolts
> to the rear of the table directly in the path of the flying sawdust. It can be
> swiveled around a bit to point at the blade when it is mitering. A shop vac
> plugs in right where the sawdust hits, it shoots straight down the hose. It
> works rather well, but I'm not sure if they still sell it. I have seen others
> that were homemade of sheet metal.
>
That's what I do.
All I use is the fat floor nozzle that came with my wet/dry vac.
Like this one:
http://xrl.us/nozzle
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com
[email protected]
---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply
In article <7f681ef7-e745-47c3-abc0-4893a5c8e1c5@h16g2000yqj.googlegroups.com>,
[email protected] says...
>
>I recently purchased a Craftsman RAS and a hd shop vac.
>After hooking up the vac hose to the exhaust port on the RAS I was
>quite disappointed to see all the sawdust flying out the front of the
>blade.
>Any ideas on how to contain the dust using the vac?
I have the Sears dust collector for the saw, which is a plastic hood that bolts
to the rear of the table directly in the path of the flying sawdust. It can be
swiveled around a bit to point at the blade when it is mitering. A shop vac
plugs in right where the sawdust hits, it shoots straight down the hose. It
works rather well, but I'm not sure if they still sell it. I have seen others
that were homemade of sheet metal.
The dust port on the blade guard is mainly for ripping, when the blade
guard extensions are slid down to prevent the wood from lifting and the
anti-kickback pawls are dropped onto the wood, which forces the sawdust into
the blade guard.
--
MacD
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:7f681ef7-e745-47c3-abc0-4893a5c8e1c5@h16g2000yqj.googlegroups.com...
>I recently purchased a Craftsman RAS and a hd shop vac.
> After hooking up the vac hose to the exhaust port on the RAS I was
> quite disappointed to see all the sawdust flying out the front of the
> blade.
> Any ideas on how to contain the dust using the vac?
>
At one time Craftsman made a plastic chute that was mounted on the rear
table behind the blade. You fastened the 2-1/2" vac hose to it to suck the
sawdust away as you cut. I have one along with an electrical box to start
the vac when the RAS starts. I got that box from Woodcraft.