Jet pleated canister dust collector

Dust collection dos and don'ts, improving shop air quality and safety with PPE
Post Reply
User avatar
MikeSibley
Registered User
Posts: 161
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 6:05 pm
Location: Mississippi
Preferred name: Mike
Has thanked: 7 times
Been thanked: 36 times

Jet pleated canister dust collector

#1

Post by MikeSibley »

I have one of the Jet collectors that has the pleated filter canister on top. Of course, it has the little bar that moves paddles interior to the canister to clean the buildup on the filter. However, the fine dust seems to fill up the filter and on occasion I take my air compressor and blow it from the outside. It seems to help but I really think that the overall suction capacity is not what it used to be.

Anyone know of any other methods of cleaning the filter or do I just need to replace it? It is probably 8-10 years old.

I also thought about adding a container to collect some of the dust before it gets to the unit but that would pick up the larger pieces but the fine dust would probably still impact the filter.

Just curious if you folks have any thoughts or experience in this arena.

Mike
User avatar
Herb Stoops
The Welcome Wagon
Posts: 3054
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
Location: Auburn WA.,USA
Preferred name: Raff
Has thanked: 1484 times
Been thanked: 876 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#2

Post by Herb Stoops »

I have read that using a nozzle on an air hose can punch holes in the pleated filter, I reverse the hose on the shop vac and blow the air into the outside of the pleated filter. Some people I have read have good success by using an old tennis shoe and slapping the outside of the filter. Then using the shop vac to clean out the dust box at the bottom.
Herb
Cherryville Chuck
Global Moderator
Global Moderator
Posts: 2648
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:27 pm
Location: Cherryville, B C
Has thanked: 561 times
Been thanked: 1011 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#3

Post by Cherryville Chuck »

When I had my log skidder I used to take the air filters and wash them in a 5 gallon pail with dish soap and water. Then several rinses until the rinse water came clean. I was told that if you held a trouble light inside and couldn't see it through the filter that it was time to replace it. Whether you can take one of those and wash it I don't know but if you get to a point where it's not working satisfactorily and nothing else is working it might be worth a try.

Like Herb I've heard hat compressed air is bad for them. Maybe if you drop the pressure to around 30 psi it might be okay. If you do that I would try holding a vac wand inside the filter opposite the compressed air. Maybe just using the vac on the inside might help too.
User avatar
Herb Stoops
The Welcome Wagon
Posts: 3054
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
Location: Auburn WA.,USA
Preferred name: Raff
Has thanked: 1484 times
Been thanked: 876 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#4

Post by Herb Stoops »

On the log skidder,Chuck, were those the intake filters for the engine? those would have the dust collecting on the outside of the filter, the opposite for the jet. I notice the upper filter on the jet must be the pleated filter, there is only the chip/dust bag or bin below the filter. Mine is setup on a cyclone where the chips fall out first, then the air goes through the 2 pleated filter and dust drops into a box at the bottom,or sticks to the inside of the filter.
On my first dust collector, I built it in an enclosed box. the air from the exhaust of the cyclone blew into the top of the box through the filter then clean air out the bottom of the filter. There was no wire screen on the outside of the pleats, it was inside of the filter and the pleats were exposed on the outside of the filter inside the tall box. Talk about an SOB to clean. The filter had to be removed taken out in the yard, blown out the best you could, then washed with soapy water and rinsed then dried before re-installing inside the filter box.
Herb
User avatar
Stick486
CS/TS
Posts: 20493
Joined: Thu Jan 21, 2021 7:40 am
Location: Central Colorado
Preferred name: Stick486
Has thanked: 657 times
Been thanked: 580 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#5

Post by Stick486 »

Mechanical cleaning - shaking or shocking filters to dislodge the built up dust cake.... but don't over do it...
Reverse air cleaning - introduced large volume of low pressure air flow in the opposite direction of the filtered air... emphasis on low pressure... if you blast them with compressed air, you’ll easily blow a hole through them ruining the filter... use your shop vac exhaust..

let's look to your system for design issues...
did you try to turn your DC into a shop vac???......
as in your air flow is restricted...
we need pics of your system...
Forget the primal scream, just ROAR!!!
SNORK” Mountain Congressional Library and Taxidermy...
Cherryville Chuck
Global Moderator
Global Moderator
Posts: 2648
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:27 pm
Location: Cherryville, B C
Has thanked: 561 times
Been thanked: 1011 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#6

Post by Cherryville Chuck »

Herb Stoops wrote: Mon Jul 05, 2021 1:48 pm On the log skidder,Chuck, were those the intake filters for the engine? those would have the dust collecting on the outside of the filter, the opposite for the jet. I notice the upper filter on the jet must be the pleated filter, there is only the chip/dust bag or bin below the filter. Mine is setup on a cyclone where the chips fall out first, then the air goes through the 2 pleated filter and dust drops into a box at the bottom,or sticks to the inside of the filter.
On my first dust collector, I built it in an enclosed box. the air from the exhaust of the cyclone blew into the top of the box through the filter then clean air out the bottom of the filter. There was no wire screen on the outside of the pleats, it was inside of the filter and the pleats were exposed on the outside of the filter inside the tall box. Talk about an SOB to clean. The filter had to be removed taken out in the yard, blown out the best you could, then washed with soapy water and rinsed then dried before re-installing inside the filter box.
Herb
It was reverse flow in comparison but I'm not sure it would make a difference when washing one. I can't remember now if it had wire mesh around the filter material or not. Without the mesh on a filter that big could be a problem but like I said, try washing as a last resort.
User avatar
Herb Stoops
The Welcome Wagon
Posts: 3054
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
Location: Auburn WA.,USA
Preferred name: Raff
Has thanked: 1484 times
Been thanked: 876 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#7

Post by Herb Stoops »

On the pleated filters the pleats are tight together inside the round filter, and the outsides are loose to the point that they can be separated with your fingers a little. If the wire screen is outside like the ones I have now when air is blown into them they will separate a little, but the inside pleats are tight together,that is why the rotating brush will work fairly well to clean off most of the debris. I don't have the rotating brush inside mine.
Herb
User avatar
Jon
Registered User
Posts: 198
Joined: Sat Oct 31, 2020 7:27 pm
Location: Near Boring Oregon
Preferred name: Jon
Has thanked: 165 times
Been thanked: 113 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#8

Post by Jon »

I added a Wynn filter to my DC and have used 2 approaches to cleaning the fine dust from it each beginning with the traditional tapping. The 1st approach was to remove the canister from the DC and use a brush head on the shop vac to gently clean the inside of the filter. Seems to work well but one needs to take care not to damage the pleats. The 2nd approach was to roll the DC over to the shop door and after tapping using my battery powered leaf blower set on low, with the nozzle removed ( leaves a short tube about 6" in diameter). By keeping the blower about 2' away from the filter I could easily observer dust falling into the collector bag.
I now use the tapping plus leaf blower approach as removing and replacing the filter just adds additional effort.

Adding a cyclone system has also improved the overall performance of the system.
User avatar
HandyDan
Forum Moderator
Forum Moderator
Posts: 7051
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 7:44 pm
Location: Youngstown, Oh
Has thanked: 378 times
Been thanked: 372 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#9

Post by HandyDan »

Get one of these for the shop vacuum and stick it up in there.

image.png
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
HandyDan
Youngstown, Oh
Cherryville Chuck
Global Moderator
Global Moderator
Posts: 2648
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:27 pm
Location: Cherryville, B C
Has thanked: 561 times
Been thanked: 1011 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#10

Post by Cherryville Chuck »

HandyDan wrote: Tue Jul 06, 2021 3:30 pm Get one of these for the shop vacuum and stick it up in there.


image.png
I hope we're still talking about cleaning the filter.
User avatar
Jon
Registered User
Posts: 198
Joined: Sat Oct 31, 2020 7:27 pm
Location: Near Boring Oregon
Preferred name: Jon
Has thanked: 165 times
Been thanked: 113 times

Re: Jet pleated canister dust collector

#11

Post by Jon »

Cherryville Chuck wrote: Tue Jul 06, 2021 5:36 pm
HandyDan wrote: Tue Jul 06, 2021 3:30 pm Get one of these for the shop vacuum and stick it up in there.


image.png
I hope we're still talking about cleaning the filter.
Been there done it. 😳
Post Reply