dgardner
Moderator
Math that can be moved from place to place?Ahhh the memories, dan and his portable math.
Math that can be moved from place to place?Ahhh the memories, dan and his portable math.
the measurements at the machine mean nothing
he should put it at the end of a 100 feet of hose
Dwell Pro Mike sent me this via his crappy phone.
I'll assume that when he hits the 2nd vac and the gauge tops out that that is a good thing..
Unless that a gauge for coke snorters...
Ametek's data sheet for the 116765 lists a sealed vac of 136" wc, so two in series (using the 60% rule):It shows inches of lift probably 150 with one vac and goes to 220 inches of lift with second vac
High lift equals low cfm. You can't suck a basketball through a straw.
Dwell Pro Mike sent me this via his crappy phone.
I'll assume that when he hits the 2nd vac and the gauge tops out that that is a good thing..
Unless that a gauge for coke snorters...
Dwell Pro Mike sent me this via his crappy phone.
I'll assume that when he hits the 2nd vac and the gauge tops out that that is a good thing..
Unless that a gauge for coke snorters...
Standard atmospheric pressure (at sea level, where Mikey lives) is 29.92"hg. If I seal up a hose and evacuate all the air I would have a sealed vac reading of 29.92, but I live at 1200 feet elevation where the air is not as dense, so I woudn't quite get to 29.92, hence why I said 28 (It's actually 28.68). But my vacuum pump could not maintain that vacuum if air were entering the hose, so the instant I hooked it up to a wand I would have only 5 or 6 cfm flow, and my vac would essentially drop to zero. Sealed vac readings are meaningless in the carpet cleaning world....