A few comments for you before you begin using a manometer for large suction fans.
The photo I posted is the size typically used to set gas pressure for a natural gas or propane generator such a 20 KW Generac. Gas pressures are typically 7 to 20” of water.
I looked at the spec’s for a central vac for a home recently. It would suck water up 171” which is 14’ 3”.
This spec is for the vac hose completely closed off so no air is flowing.
If you have a shop vac, why not start with it first. Connect the U tube to the drain on the vac using duct tape. Now you can see real suction numbers while the unit is moving air through the hose.
My initial comment on getting 10’ of plastic tubing is incorrect and you will just suck the water out of the U tube if each leg of the U is about 48”. You need a much larger U if things are working well.
The U tube can be as small a diameter as you can find. You may have to mount it on a long 2 x 4 or a TV tower. Alternatively, a garden hose you can see through could be used.
By starting with a shop vac which is working well, you have a sense of what numbers you should see on a manometer on your leaf vac.
The style of fan impeller you have is typical of ones used on school shop central vac systems for sawdust. The design of the impeller is so that sticks and chunks of wood do not get hung up.
Here is the spec table on a portable shop sawdust extractor. The Vacuum is listed in Pa but the inches of water number would be 96”
.
I know you have already said the impeller rotation is correct. It is the fan enclosure or scroll that generates the pressure. The system is so simple.
Fan rpm is also important. By eye, your fan impeller looks to be about 12" in diameter. A fan that size rotating at 540 rpm is not going to do much.
Think of the average electric motor which runs at 1800 rpm. On a sawdust extractor unit the fan impeller is right on the end of the motor shaft
Do you have a spec page for your Kubota unit. Are the pulleys running from the pto something you can photograph so I can see their sizes.
Dave M7040
The photo I posted is the size typically used to set gas pressure for a natural gas or propane generator such a 20 KW Generac. Gas pressures are typically 7 to 20” of water.
I looked at the spec’s for a central vac for a home recently. It would suck water up 171” which is 14’ 3”.
This spec is for the vac hose completely closed off so no air is flowing.
If you have a shop vac, why not start with it first. Connect the U tube to the drain on the vac using duct tape. Now you can see real suction numbers while the unit is moving air through the hose.
My initial comment on getting 10’ of plastic tubing is incorrect and you will just suck the water out of the U tube if each leg of the U is about 48”. You need a much larger U if things are working well.
The U tube can be as small a diameter as you can find. You may have to mount it on a long 2 x 4 or a TV tower. Alternatively, a garden hose you can see through could be used.
By starting with a shop vac which is working well, you have a sense of what numbers you should see on a manometer on your leaf vac.
The style of fan impeller you have is typical of ones used on school shop central vac systems for sawdust. The design of the impeller is so that sticks and chunks of wood do not get hung up.
Here is the spec table on a portable shop sawdust extractor. The Vacuum is listed in Pa but the inches of water number would be 96”
I know you have already said the impeller rotation is correct. It is the fan enclosure or scroll that generates the pressure. The system is so simple.
Fan rpm is also important. By eye, your fan impeller looks to be about 12" in diameter. A fan that size rotating at 540 rpm is not going to do much.
Think of the average electric motor which runs at 1800 rpm. On a sawdust extractor unit the fan impeller is right on the end of the motor shaft
Do you have a spec page for your Kubota unit. Are the pulleys running from the pto something you can photograph so I can see their sizes.
Dave M7040