by Tony » Thu May 03, 2007 7:14 pm
One stage vacuum motors have the motor driving a single rotor centrifugal blower mounted directly on the end of the motor.
With two stage vacuum motors there are two centrifugal blowers mounted on the same shaft, one behind the other. The air passes first through one, then the other, and this greatly increases the maximum available developed air pressure, (or vacuum).
The whole thing is usually built into a common round pressed metal outer housing. It is usually not very obvious just by looking, if a vacuum motor has one or two stages.
At higher developed pressures two stage vacuum motors can operate more efficiently, but they also have the unfortunate characteristic, that pressure falls off faster with increasing flow, and pressure rises far more steeply as flow is restricted.
That is not a very desirable characteristic for us, but it is deliberately designed into a vacuum cleaner to give greater suction against the floor, but not allow the motor to be overloaded too much with full unrestricted open airflow. The vacuum cleaner manufacturers build in this characteristic deliberately. For us it is an absolute curse. It means your bench may be likely to implode or burst from overpressure if flow is accidentally restricted, and both pressure and flow die off at a disappointingly high rate when you are trying to flow something particularly large on your bench.
That is the main reason I much prefer a large single stage industrial blower to multi vacuum cleaner motors. The pressure stays much more constant over the whole flow range. It is structurally a lot safer for the bench too.
Everything is cheaper in the US, particularly as the US dollar continues to sink lower. But just as you say, shipping stuff overseas from the US often costs far more than the part is worth, and not just for heavy objects either.
A triac controller will certainly never hurt the motor, it is far more likely that the motor will blow up the triac !
The beauty of a variac is that it is just a simple transformer, and is completely immune to the damaging effects of very high voltage transients or high electrical interference.
I am not familiar with the situation in Europe, but in Australia we have weekly papers published that are full of nothing else but second hand goods advertised by private individuals. There are some other on line secondhand websites like e-bay too. E-bay is probably the most famous, but surely Europe must have some similar if less well known secondhand websites ??
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.