I am in the process of re-wiring my garage to add 220 for a new table
saw. While I am at it I am wondering if I should re-wire my Penn State
1 1/2 hp dust collector for 220v operation. It is on a shared 110 v
line now which I could wire as a dedicated 110 volt breaker handling
only the collector. If it is on a dedicated 110v breaker of sufficent
amperage is there any real advantage to changing it to 220 operation?
Dust collectors draw a lot of currrent during startup (typically
something like 50-60A at 120V). Running at 240V will cut the current
draw in half, which is generally a good thing, but don't expect to
notice a difference in steady-state performance.
If you want to be scientific about it, measure the line voltage at the
dust collector receptacle during startup and running. As long as the
voltage stays at 110V or above, you're fine as is. If it's sagging
below 110V, changing to 240V would be useful.
Bob wrote:
> I am in the process of re-wiring my garage to add 220 for a new table
> saw. While I am at it I am wondering if I should re-wire my Penn State
> 1 1/2 hp dust collector for 220v operation. It is on a shared 110 v
> line now which I could wire as a dedicated 110 volt breaker handling
> only the collector. If it is on a dedicated 110v breaker of sufficent
> amperage is there any real advantage to changing it to 220 operation?
>
it will run cooler thus last longer
"Bob" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I am in the process of re-wiring my garage to add 220 for a new table
> saw. While I am at it I am wondering if I should re-wire my Penn State
> 1 1/2 hp dust collector for 220v operation. It is on a shared 110 v
> line now which I could wire as a dedicated 110 volt breaker handling
> only the collector. If it is on a dedicated 110v breaker of sufficent
> amperage is there any real advantage to changing it to 220 operation?
>
Measure the current before bothering. My PSI "1 1/2hp" DC only drew 8 amps
on 120v, so there was no reason to rewire it.
A real 1.5hp motor will draw 16a and will really benefit from being on 240v.
Voltage drop will be reduced and the motor will last longer since it will
not be starved on startup.
On 1 Aug 2006 20:24:56 -0700, "Bob" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I am in the process of re-wiring my garage to add 220 for a new table
>saw. While I am at it I am wondering if I should re-wire my Penn State
>1 1/2 hp dust collector for 220v operation. It is on a shared 110 v
>line now which I could wire as a dedicated 110 volt breaker handling
>only the collector. If it is on a dedicated 110v breaker of sufficent
>amperage is there any real advantage to changing it to 220 operation?
I re-wired my PennState DC and bought a 220v LongRanger remote with no
regrets. Higher voltage gives smoother motor starts, slightly more
efficient operation.
Bob wrote:
> I am in the process of re-wiring my garage to add 220 for a new table
> saw. While I am at it I am wondering if I should re-wire my Penn State
> 1 1/2 hp dust collector for 220v operation.
As a matter of practice, use the highest voltage available.
It reduces line losses, thus saving you money.
Lew