@@BorgheseBo by going thru water, you actually lower the efficiency of vacuumn cleaner.. because it has to bubble thru all those water.. anyway, nice idea. i have the samething in mine some while ago.
I really like your idea using water to collect dust and stuff. One little suggestion though.... dont waste ashes from your fireplace. They should go in your garden or your soil. :)
How does this technology (if implemented via a larger bucket, powerful pump...) compare to a HEPA 13 filter? Does water capture all the smallest particles?
It should be a better filter if designed properly, providing you don’t have more dust than the water can filter. It will eventually turn it to a slush, dough, then not work as desired. Imagine it like wetting cement, if you don’t wet it enough, the water gets overpowered by the dry dust. Also, you will need to design it so that your vacuum doesn’t suck up the water because the volume is too small. Every time you empty the water it will be like a brand new filter and will have a consistent performance for the life of the design over a filter that gets clogged and never will be completely clean. The downside will be the potential smell if you don’t empty it.
@@Tensquaremetreworkshop A LOT depends on the design which I’d like to keep it all contained like a wet/dry vacuum for convenience. Similar to blowing air into water with a straw; the straw being the inlet and the water being less than half the container volume. But yes, if it happens after the exhaust, that would work easily.
@@ProjectAnubisUSA I think you are confusing flow with volume. The air is not sucked through the water, it is blown. In practice, this system does not sufficiently mix the air and water, much of the dust will not be removed. It also adds back pressure, reducing the vacuum available.
ok, my bad, I thought that white hole was your vacuum, its clearly not. So what is it. The small bucket has the Vacuum on the top of it, the port to the water tank on the bottom, the other side of the water tank has the hole you vacuum with. So what is that second thing attached to the top of the small bucket (this is what I thought was asking first time, just called out the wrong connector)
Dump that black water on your plants they will thank you for it. Tons of good stuff in burned wood for plants. I actually go to all my neighbors at my cabin and take their ashes from them and dump it in my compost.
Poca abertura de succión. Si SÓLO es para un momento, ( 3 o 5 min) ...,ok. Si lo utilizas más tiempo, el motor se quemará. Buena idea, buen video. Un saludo muy cordial. ( mejor un ciclón "casero" y mejor, después , ...un filtro de agua, para el polvo fino." tambien casero"....Ahí esta el problema...que NO absorba agua el motor). Yo lo he hecho con un- cono- de estropajo( Scotch Brite) en otro cubo aparte. Utilizando SIEMPRE un diámetro de 40 mm. Un saludo.
I used a second bucket smaller for one reason : my vacuum cleaner will break if some water comes inside, so that small bucket guarantees a second obstacle for water. If you have a tall bucket you can use it without a second one, but make sure that the water level stays far from the aspiration port.
Borghese wow I don't think it will break I didn't know a little water can actually break a vacuum like how does water break something?? Nice idea this is and seems to work might make it for shop vac but Im kinda scared to do it now cuz u said water can break vacuums so water is very strong and care must b taken when dealing with it as it might hurt or damage my hands if it can break vacuum made of strong plastic whats to stop it breaking or damaging me hands laike!
the air travelling into the main bucket of water is going to cause water droplets to become air born an can get sucked UP , if a filter is not added then this water can still destroy the vacuum.
I'm not buying that scene change at the end 😂 this device will work well to an extent, but no way is a vacuum pumping any meaningful air through black sludge...
Did a search to find you because I'm thinking about making an air scrubber this way the capture micro particulate while I'm riding my bicycle... Propylene glycol doesn't freeze... And it actually is a mild antimicrobial can be mixed with water... There is a direct statistical correlation between Geographic toxic air quality in rates of incidence and mortality from the supposed viral vectors... And I've been keeping an eye on the air quality and it's disconcerting to say the least... careful about putting ashes down the drain you're likely to find out that wasn't a good idea?
Buy a used Dyson cinetic cyclone bin from eBay make the holes bigger on it and add the shop vac hose on it and n another for picking up dirt trust me not even a tiny spec of dust will enter the shop vac n even if it does the filter will stop it but the Dyson cinetic doesn't even use filters on its vacuum thats how efficient it is!! Try it trust me it will b the best £30 or £40 u ever spend and u will have a clean shop vac n a lifetime filter on it too!!! Another method is to add another hose to the exaust outlet on the shop vac u know the same place where u add the hose for the blowing function on the shop vac and place that pipe straight out the window and all the picked up dirt that escapes the filter will leave via the hose that is out the window n straight outside! Your health is important so protect it with my super duper methods!!! Patent pending😂
I have seen many Dyson units. They all has a filter. Some have two. And they can clog. On the latest units, after you wash them you have to dry them for 24 hours before use. Why? The crap design blows the air over the unprotected circuit board, and moisture can destroy the board. Expensive.
@@Tensquaremetreworkshop It's not crap design. Why would they protect the circuit from moisture when the moisture does other issues, it's working as intended. It's not a wet vac.
@@turtlos Any circuit board that is open to the environment should have a conformal coating. Standard practice. I would have strong words for any of my design engineers that missed specifying this. In a consumer device where the user is advised to wash the filter immediately in front and told, in small print, to wait 24 hours before use, it is either incompetent design or an attempt to boost spares sales. I leave it to others to decide which.
@@Tensquaremetreworkshop There is no point to coat if there is going to be other problems when misused. It's purpose is to vacuum dry stuff. Waiting for 24hours to dry filters for consumer devices is nothing new, I've seen it many times and by reading instructions you can't miss it. It is often told many times to dry it before use and not by any small print. Consumers tend to be stupid and belive they know everything that is invented, so they don't read the manuals and get to know how the devices work. I often stumple upon videos etc. where people amaze about simple stuff, like their dishwashers basic functions, that you could even figure out without the manuals.
@@turtlos Firstly, how many consumers keep the manual/user instructions for all the devices in their house? Personally I have over 200 electrical/electronic devices- requiring a whole library. Secondly, my daughter made exactly this 'mistake' on a Dyson- and she is far from stupid. Thirdly, if (as you seem to believe) consumers are 'stupid', then all the more reason to protect the board. It is a matter of a few pence, and at the prices Dyson charges, lost in the weeds. Fourthly, this is far from the only poor design choices- I stripped down the DC01 and identified seventeen 'schoolboy error' type design faults with it. Fifthly, they use extremely poor parts. The Dyson replacement motor for their corded models is slightly dearer than the Hoover motor. The Dyson is thin bent sheet, the Hoover is a solid die casting. A comparison shows superior materials and machining on the Hoover. Having to keep a domestic product dry just because the manufacturer is either too lazy, mean, or calculating is madness. I use the Dyson as a case study in poor design for my design classes.
Music is not appreciated. Why not just narrate on the process?. Thin font text overlays are barely readable. Neither construction details nor design intent is clear.
Nice job!
Thanks Giaco!
@@BorgheseBo by going thru water, you actually lower the efficiency of vacuumn cleaner.. because it has to bubble thru all those water.. anyway, nice idea. i have the samething in mine some while ago.
I really like your idea using water to collect dust and stuff. One little suggestion though.... dont waste ashes from your fireplace. They should go in your garden or your soil. :)
Yeah I usually put the dust in the garden, bat at the end of winter I need to clear al well for avoid problem and for keep well 😉
@@BorgheseBo so if I am understanding you corrrectly I should use my dust collector as a water filter ?
You pour everything down the sink? That stuff belongs to the yard.
The dust is basically ash, so i can put in the sink as well as in mu garden for make my trees happier
You basically put concrete down the sink as far as your drain is concerned
Ohhwwww my good. Do you see that.... He put everything down the sink 😂😂😂😂 THE END OF THE WORLD IS COMING 😂😂😂😂
You poured dirt into the sink, your can clog drain or pipes
yeah do not do that! Even putting coffee grounds down a sink is a bad idea. Does anyone know if it is bad to put coffee grounds in the toilet?
@@bobo888bobo it's OK it the toilet, but I use a washable coffee filter. I throw the old coffee grounds out in the yard.
I dont get it... why the chamber on top
I didn't understand what does the small bucket do. Shoudn't it work without it too?
It appears to act like a splash guard, keeping the water from getting into the vacuum.
Did you look in the vacuum cleaner?
I wanted to use it as a second filter after a "cyclone", for soot, and it went through it though...
RIP sink
How does this technology (if implemented via a larger bucket, powerful pump...) compare to a HEPA 13 filter? Does water capture all the smallest particles?
It should be a better filter if designed properly, providing you don’t have more dust than the water can filter. It will eventually turn it to a slush, dough, then not work as desired. Imagine it like wetting cement, if you don’t wet it enough, the water gets overpowered by the dry dust. Also, you will need to design it so that your vacuum doesn’t suck up the water because the volume is too small. Every time you empty the water it will be like a brand new filter and will have a consistent performance for the life of the design over a filter that gets clogged and never will be completely clean. The downside will be the potential smell if you don’t empty it.
@@ProjectAnubisUSA excellent. Much appreciated :)
@@ProjectAnubisUSA the vacuum cannot suck up the water- it is after the motor, where there is a positive pressure.
@@Tensquaremetreworkshop A LOT depends on the design which I’d like to keep it all contained like a wet/dry vacuum for convenience. Similar to blowing air into water with a straw; the straw being the inlet and the water being less than half the container volume. But yes, if it happens after the exhaust, that would work easily.
@@ProjectAnubisUSA I think you are confusing flow with volume. The air is not sucked through the water, it is blown. In practice, this system does not sufficiently mix the air and water, much of the dust will not be removed. It also adds back pressure, reducing the vacuum available.
Which hole did you make bigger?
Use that ash in the garden, plants love that stuff
what is the black thing on the small upper bucket?
Greg Ward It's only an adapter, because my blower doesn't fit perfectly ;)
ok, my bad, I thought that white hole was your vacuum, its clearly not. So what is it. The small bucket has the Vacuum on the top of it, the port to the water tank on the bottom, the other side of the water tank has the hole you vacuum with. So what is that second thing attached to the top of the small bucket (this is what I thought was asking first time, just called out the wrong connector)
Dump that black water on your plants they will thank you for it. Tons of good stuff in burned wood for plants. I actually go to all my neighbors at my cabin and take their ashes from them and dump it in my compost.
Its a cleaning bong !
dookie177 hookahs
does anything get into the vacuum bag such as dust?
Only little particle, the most of dust remain trapped in the wather
cool build, and idea, thumbs up!
awesome!
Poca abertura de succión.
Si SÓLO es para un momento, ( 3 o 5 min) ...,ok.
Si lo utilizas más tiempo, el motor se quemará.
Buena idea, buen video.
Un saludo muy cordial.
( mejor un ciclón "casero" y mejor, después , ...un filtro de agua, para el polvo fino." tambien casero"....Ahí esta el problema...que NO absorba agua el motor).
Yo lo he hecho con un- cono- de estropajo( Scotch Brite) en otro cubo aparte.
Utilizando SIEMPRE un diámetro de 40 mm.
Un saludo.
Don't pour the dirty water into the sink. It will block the pipe. Pour the dirty water through a sock, the sock will hold all the dirt.
Or just dump it in your compost. Your wasting very good fertilizer.
Hi,
Why did you use a second small bucket on top of the first one?
Couldn't you connect the vacuum hose directly in the big lid?
Thanks!!
I used a second bucket smaller for one reason :
my vacuum cleaner will break if some water comes inside, so that small bucket guarantees a second obstacle for water.
If you have a tall bucket you can use it without a second one, but make sure that the water level stays far from the aspiration port.
Borghese wow I don't think it will break I didn't know a little water can actually break a vacuum like how does water break something?? Nice idea this is and seems to work might make it for shop vac but Im kinda scared to do it now cuz u said water can break vacuums so water is very strong and care must b taken when dealing with it as it might hurt or damage my hands if it can break vacuum made of strong plastic whats to stop it breaking or damaging me hands laike!
water can destroy the filter.
the air travelling into the main bucket of water is going to cause water droplets to become air born an can get sucked UP , if a filter is not added then this water can still destroy the vacuum.
@@superclips5467 That comment says more about you than anything else.... seems you are the only one who didn't know what he meant
Why did the dirty water stay in the sink and not go down the drain? Lol I would dump that stuff in the garden.
i hope your wife didn't see you dump that in the sink. great idea
Well done,
maybe you should throw that ash water sludge on the plants or grass for better growth ...? No offense just an idea. Thank you for the vid.
I'm not buying that scene change at the end 😂 this device will work well to an extent, but no way is a vacuum pumping any meaningful air through black sludge...
Did a search to find you because I'm thinking about making an air scrubber this way the capture micro particulate while I'm riding my bicycle... Propylene glycol doesn't freeze... And it actually is a mild antimicrobial can be mixed with water... There is a direct statistical correlation between Geographic toxic air quality in rates of incidence and mortality from the supposed viral vectors... And I've been keeping an eye on the air quality and it's disconcerting to say the least... careful about putting ashes down the drain you're likely to find out that wasn't a good idea?
Buy a used Dyson cinetic cyclone bin from eBay make the holes bigger on it and add the shop vac hose on it and n another for picking up dirt trust me not even a tiny spec of dust will enter the shop vac n even if it does the filter will stop it but the Dyson cinetic doesn't even use filters on its vacuum thats how efficient it is!! Try it trust me it will b the best £30 or £40 u ever spend and u will have a clean shop vac n a lifetime filter on it too!!! Another method is to add another hose to the exaust outlet on the shop vac u know the same place where u add the hose for the blowing function on the shop vac and place that pipe straight out the window and all the picked up dirt that escapes the filter will leave via the hose that is out the window n straight outside! Your health is important so protect it with my super duper methods!!! Patent pending😂
I have seen many Dyson units. They all has a filter. Some have two. And they can clog. On the latest units, after you wash them you have to dry them for 24 hours before use. Why? The crap design blows the air over the unprotected circuit board, and moisture can destroy the board. Expensive.
@@Tensquaremetreworkshop It's not crap design. Why would they protect the circuit from moisture when the moisture does other issues, it's working as intended. It's not a wet vac.
@@turtlos Any circuit board that is open to the environment should have a conformal coating. Standard practice. I would have strong words for any of my design engineers that missed specifying this. In a consumer device where the user is advised to wash the filter immediately in front and told, in small print, to wait 24 hours before use, it is either incompetent design or an attempt to boost spares sales. I leave it to others to decide which.
@@Tensquaremetreworkshop There is no point to coat if there is going to be other problems when misused. It's purpose is to vacuum dry stuff. Waiting for 24hours to dry filters for consumer devices is nothing new, I've seen it many times and by reading instructions you can't miss it. It is often told many times to dry it before use and not by any small print. Consumers tend to be stupid and belive they know everything that is invented, so they don't read the manuals and get to know how the devices work. I often stumple upon videos etc. where people amaze about simple stuff, like their dishwashers basic functions, that you could even figure out without the manuals.
@@turtlos Firstly, how many consumers keep the manual/user instructions for all the devices in their house? Personally I have over 200 electrical/electronic devices- requiring a whole library.
Secondly, my daughter made exactly this 'mistake' on a Dyson- and she is far from stupid.
Thirdly, if (as you seem to believe) consumers are 'stupid', then all the more reason to protect the board. It is a matter of a few pence, and at the prices Dyson charges, lost in the weeds.
Fourthly, this is far from the only poor design choices- I stripped down the DC01 and identified seventeen 'schoolboy error' type design faults with it.
Fifthly, they use extremely poor parts. The Dyson replacement motor for their corded models is slightly dearer than the Hoover motor. The Dyson is thin bent sheet, the Hoover is a solid die casting. A comparison shows superior materials and machining on the Hoover.
Having to keep a domestic product dry just because the manufacturer is either too lazy, mean, or calculating is madness.
I use the Dyson as a case study in poor design for my design classes.
Music is not appreciated. Why not just narrate on the process?. Thin font text overlays are barely readable.
Neither construction details nor design intent is clear.
What’s with the 70’s porn music
While I appreciate the video, the music sucked, and that stuff should be poured in your garden. Wood ash is great for vegetables.