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Re: Building a closet for dust collector


 

While I have absolutely nothing of value to add to this conversation as it is far over my head, I was quite amazed at the temperature change in my shop with the saw and dust collector running and an occasional start of the air compressor to refeed the DC in only a couple hours of continuous running. Well welcomed here in the winter.
Glen
Alpine Moulding and Millwork Inc.
Mail: ?? P.O. Box 257
?????????? Avery, CA. 95224
Shop: 441 Pennsylvania Gulch Road
????????? Murphys, CA. 95247
????????? 650-678-3137
LIC # 707507


On Fri, May 22, 2020 at 8:06 PM imranindiana via <imranindiana=[email protected]> wrote:
I am intrigued by this conversation. In a data center I follow that energy is turning into heat. But in case of a motor I am not convinced.

Imagine a well pump. There is energy stored in the water that has been lifted. So per the law of conservation of energy not all energy got converted into heat.

Imran

On May 22, 2020, at 10:34 PM, TJ Cornish <tj@...> wrote:

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I think you just said mostly what I did ¨C that the energy turns into heat, just not entirely in the motor itself.?

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8KW of electricity into a room turns into 27,000 of BTU in that room, either directly or indirectly, unless that motor is driving a shaft through a wall where some of that energy is converted into heat somewhere else. That 8KW of heat may not stay in the room due to diffusion through the room walls and ceiling, but it¡¯s put into the room, no if¡¯s, and¡¯s, or but¡¯s, just as if you had an 8KW electric resistance heater.

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Energy is not returned to the environment on the return leg ¨C the neutral wire in a single phase 120v world, or the other hot legs in a 240v or 3-phase world. If the energy is not needed for work output or system inefficiency losses it is not drawn in the first place; e.g. a 5HP/3KW motor has a free-running power consumption value of maybe 1KW, and that power consumption increases when the motor is asked to do work. Only when the motor is fully loaded does it draw 3KW of power. Yes there is voltage drop on the electrical service wiring and yes there is heat generated from that lost energy, but that¡¯s a different problem in a different room. Power distribution is sized to deliver nominal voltage at the end point, factoring in losses in distribution.

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RE designing HVAC based on electrical load ¨C yes, this is exactly how it¡¯s done. My day job is in IT, part of which includes managing a datacenter and it¡¯s power and cooling. Cooling load is absolutely sized based on power draw of computing equipment as well as the expected environmental factors. ??

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Small spaces like workshops ¨C small closed systems ¨C will show the temperature rise of power consumption more quickly than a larger system which has a lot more thermal sinking capability.

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I agree it¡¯s complicated, and I¡¯m glad nothing is simple on the Felder forum, which I¡¯m new to. There are few things in life that can truly be expressed simply.? Learning stuff ¨C the reason I joined the group ¨C happens when the complexity is welcomed. ?

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From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> on behalf of Michael Tagge <mike.j.tagge@...>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, May 22, 2020 at 9:14 PM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FOG] Building a closet for dust collector

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No. While you may be correct that the differences between potential energy and kinetic reach equilibrium through heat transfer, it¡¯s not so clear cut as the statement that an 8kw input to a motor yields 8kw of heat within a workshop. Within systems there are many components, heat sinks, and losses. So for example, the spinning motor creates heat in bearings through friction, the blade creates heat through friction in the wood and drag through air, some energy is passed through entirely in the electrical supply and leaves the system and recovers its potential in a ground, some energy is absorbed through wood fibers/saw dust and heat sinked. Heat is lost through inefficient insulation, air drafts, radiation through windows etc. Some energy is released slowly and muddies the results like the specific heat of cast iron and sawdust. All causes, yes, 8kw input leads to 8kw of heat. But the closed system needs to be very large which simply is out of line with a real world workshop. I don¡¯t know much about sizing hvac but I don¡¯t think this is the way to do it.

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Nothing is simple on a Felder forum :) And I¡¯m waiting for my finish to dry.

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Get


From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of TJ Cornish <tj@...>
Sent: Friday, May 22, 2020 8:42:53 PM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FOG] Building a closet for dust collector

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All forms of energy ultimately end in heat, so yes, 8KW of energy coming in results in 8KW of heat in your shop.

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A 3KW 5HP motor produces 3KW worth of heat ¨C electrical resistance heat in the power cord and motor windings, sliding friction heat in the bearings and air friction in parts rotating in air. Even the work output of the motor ¨C the cutting, sanding, blowing, etc., ultimately ends up as heat ¨C if you stick your hand in a pile of just cut sawdust, it will be quite warm from the cutting tool friction and the forced deformation of the wood.

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It is accurate to say that a 3KW motor itself doesn¡¯t itself give off 10,000 BTU of heat, but if you factor all of the losses in the system and especially the work output into whatever the motor is doing, you end up with 10,000 BTU of heat in your room as a result of the motor running. It¡¯s counter-intuitive, but it¡¯s true.

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From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> on behalf of "imranindiana via " <imranindiana=[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, May 22, 2020 at 6:58 PM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FOG] Building a closet for dust collector

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Joe,

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I am not an expert but I am pretty sure this is not correct.

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¡°?That's about 8KW of electric coming in that all turns to heat, either motor heat, or friction heat from cutting etc.¡±

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Only a small portion of power being consumed is generating heat.

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Imran


On May 22, 2020, at 7:48 PM, Joe Jensen <joe.jensen@...> wrote:

?Mark, I understand the thermal mass.? I often run the saw or shaper for an hour or two straight.? Sucking 110F air into my shop would definitely be a problem.? When running I have a 5HP dust collector and a 5HP saw, shaper, or sander running. That's about 8KW of electric coming in that all turns to heat, either motor heat, or friction heat from cutting etc.? My lighting is another 2.3kw.? 1kw of electric is 3412btu so 10kw of electric in is about 34K btu.? Over 3 tons of AC.? If I ran machines all the time and wanted to keep it cool when it's over 110F I would have had to have 10 tons of AC per the mechanical engineer.? That's without dumping exhaust outside.? Now if I were heating the machine heat would work for me and not against me.

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