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The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
I didn't cut anything off...
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The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
10-4 on that Jim. This is what I did on my j/p. I put the blast gate where I didn't have to reach so far but the 5" hose will fit on the Felder coupler.
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The Fernco is a much less expensive solution. I like the 90 degree angle, it keeps the hose out of the way. I too am confused how you hook the Fernco to the flex pipe without using some rigid pipe inside. Got a pic?
Marty
Hopefully the pictures below will help:
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In the first picture the flex hose is 5" diameter. The other end fits over the MM dust port perfectly. The 4" - 4" label on the part, I believe, refers to the internal diameter of the two different pipe materials this fitting is designed to connect. Because they have different wall thickness, they have different outside diameters. That is how a 5" flex hose fits inside the large side, even though it is labeled 4" - 4".
I leave the hose clamp just tight enough that I can pull the hose off to vacuum up around the machines.
Bumbling forward into the unknown.
The Fernco actually has a recess for the clamp, but you do need to be cautious about how you tighten it down. One could always use a short piece of sheet metal to make an adapter that would be firmer if desired, but it's rare I have this thing come apart...and when it has happened, it was because I was "man-handling" it more than I should have.
BTW, you should be able to get the part number off that photo and get an identical one at the 'borg...which is where I bought mine. I use an identical one for the connection to my slider, although that one never has to be removed.
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The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
Hey Jim, what does your 5" flex hose connect to on the opposite end? I've got 6" S&D piping which was going to end with a 6"- 4" reducer. That plan is scrapped at this point. I'll grab that rubber coupling, and my 5" hose will slip over that, but I'm not sure how to tie in the 5" hose back to my 6" S&D system.
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Sometimes the best solution to morale problems is just to fire all of the unhappy people.
My drop is 6" to that location and I have a 6-5" reducer. My ducting is all metal...I don't use plastic. But you should be able to work up a connection using a 6-5" metal reducer and a little rolled sheet metal to connect to your 6" plastic. Unfortunately plastic tends to only be available in "even" number sizes. That's actually too bad because there honestly are a lot of machines where 5" is pretty ideal from an air flow perspective.
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The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
Cool deal, and thank you. Man... what a stinking hassle!
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Sometimes the best solution to morale problems is just to fire all of the unhappy people.
My connection was a bit different. I use 6" piping and a 6" hose down from the ceiling. I had a couple of extra 6" to 4" connectors, from the furnace ducting section of the local big-box store. I cut some slits in from the small end, cut off a couple inches from the small end, and with some care you get a connector that just barely slides over the MM port. Add a wrap of aluminium tape that I use for the ductwork and it's semi-permanent. Then I put a short bit of pipe on the end of the hose (crimped both ways, to fit in the hose and the fitting). It swaps quickly and makes a tight connection.
Terry T.