The important thing to realize is that a vacuum cleaner normally operates with almost blocked flow.olympiadis wrote:
What do you think best? One, two, or three stage blowers?
..and are there any vacuum motors rated for continuous use and high temps?
A very high suction pressure at low flow is what pulls the grit out of your carpet.
This is why they compound two or three stages on a single shaft to get the highest possible suction pressure from a given electric motor.
A flow bench application is rather different. We will be pulling a large volume of air at only moderate pressures, typically around 44 inches of total suction pressure.
The ideal flow bench blower would have a very flat pressure versus flow curve.
The "perfect" flow bench blower would generate 44 inches of vacuum over the entire flow range without the need for any adjustment !
The more peaky the flow curve, the more touchy it becomes to set and hold a constant test pressure, so three stage vacuum motors are never used.
Most of us are limited by how much mains power is available, and so choosing the most efficient vacuum motor becomes an important consideration.
More CFM out for fewer amps in, is always a bonus, and that plus the initial cash cost should be your guide.
So try and find vacuum motors that have the highest efficiency at around 44 inches, that is CFM out per amp of mains current going in. This is more likely to be a single stage, and sometimes a two stage vacuum motor, never a three stage.
Unfortunately all these vacuum cleaner motors run at very high rpm, with a very high power density, and are made to a price with planned obsolescence in mind...
That does not seem to be a serious problem, just design your flow bench with very easy motor access, and maybe initially buy a couple of spare motors of the identical type.
Later you will be glad you did.