Wall mounted extractor for planer thicknesser

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cpmczak

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Hi

I'm setting up a small workshop in my garage. Was lucky enough to pick up an Axminster AT310SPT planer thicknesser second hand for a decent price. I'm looking at chip extraction options now. Ideally I want something that is wall-mounted as space is at a premium and obviously at a reasonable cost, such as:

https://www.axminstertools.com/axminster-craft-ac37e-1hp-extractor-105111https://www.axminstertools.com/axminster-trade-series-ct-50rck-1hp-extractor-508483
However, Axminster customer service are saying I need one with minimum flow rate of 1500m3/hour, so something like this:

https://www.axminstertools.com/axminster-trade-series-ct-90hb-2hp-extractor-508336
I'm not exactly enamoured with the reviews, size or price of that one though. So I was just wondering if anyone has experience of using a planer thicknesser with these smaller wall mounted extractors? Or any other suggestions for suitable extractors (it doesn't have to be Axminster brand)?

Thanks.
 
Flow is everything on planers, if you don't have enough suck it will bung up.
 
Keep your eyes open for a secondhand wall mounted P&J dust extractor on ebay.
It might take a while to find one but it will be better built.
I used a cheap Record chip collector (plastic casing, stands on a single pole with a office chair like castor unit on the bottom) on a 10x8" planer thicknesser but that didn't have a fine filter to slow it down and it leaked fine dust everywhere. Not recommended and long gone. Bigger is better with these things and most vendors quoted airflows are very optimistic (50 to 100% better than you'll achieve in real world use).
If you can put it in a lean-to against the outside of your workshop that will spare you noise, save space and make sure any escaping dust is outside your workspace. It would also let you get away with a cheaper chip collector type with a bag filter. Replacement cartridge filters aren't too cheap.
DrBob is bang on - nothing makes chips like a planer and you need that airflow to keep them clear or your feed rollers will end up mashing chips into the surface of your stock.
 
Last edited:
Flow is everything on planers, if you don't have enough suck it will bung up.

Thanks. Looking at some other related threads currently, the Charnwood W685 gets mentioned a lot.

https://www.charnwood.net/products/product/wall-mounted-dust-extractor-w685/category_pathway-109
Somebody mentioned they used it fine with their 260PT. Mind you, it has a flow rate of 850m3/hour whereas the Axminster AT50E has a 1000m3/hour flow rate. The freestanding Axminster one that they have recommended to me has 1200 flow rate, which is only 20% more. Not convinced that's worth the extra £320 and the fact it would take up valuable floor space.

Anyway, happy to hear any other thoughts and opinions.
 
Update which I hope will help others. I opted for the Axminster Craft AC37E extractor in the end. I've wall mounted it with a 4m hose. Put a fairly rough piece of timber over the planer several times and the extractor has coped admirably. No clogging whatsoever. Nice quiet machine too and love the fact it's wall mounted. The only negative, which has been mentioned in other reviews, is the bags supplied have no zip on them so it makes it quite difficult to empty them through the 100mm neck opening. Overall, really pleased with it though.
 
If you get any vibrations through the wall mounting, then the Polymax website is very good for speccing/ordering anti-vibration mounts. (I had a vibrating compressor mounted on the wall, which now is silent).
https://www.polymax.co.uk/
 
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