3/16ths tubing install with D&G's Tim Wilmot
Today, retired UVM Maple Specialist Tim Wilmot, who is credited with the research and discovery of natural gravity high vacuum with 3/16th diameter tubing, does an install at The Maple News sugarhouse in Hebron, N.Y. Wilmot is now a consultant with Dominion & Grimm and spent more than eight years researching and honing the technology, which has become a phenomenon in the maple industry. Anyone with good slope should consider 3/16ths, which gives up to 29hg vacuum with no mechanical assistance...
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very nice! thank you!
I've been on 3/16 for quite some time now, it's working great.......I also found by using longer lines between the first tap and the barrel, I get more vacuum, of couse you need to have more gravity in between these two, so instead of starting at let say 6 inch of vacuum at the first tap, I now have 22 inch at first tap and going up hill, the vacuum is higher right to the top....I have 25 feet of drop between tap 1 and the barrel.
What intervals do you recommend for leak checking.
So I’m on pretty flat ground in my yard me and my daughter have 20-ish trees that we tap so from the beginning tap to the bucket how much of a slope should I need from tree to tree. Thanks for your help.
Would a can of computer duster be effective for clearing chips from holes?
Where do you install the vacuum gage to get the best reading?
What clip are you using at 2:50 to attach the tubing to itself around the first tree?
@goudrelle1
6 жыл бұрын
It's an end line clip !!!
I'm only dealing with about 15 feet of elevation from the first tree to the collection. Would it be ok if i put the first tap 15 feet up on the first few trees?
@themaplenews5228
Жыл бұрын
You will still get some vacuum, yes. Not as much as you would at the top of the line, higher up, but better than nothing. 3/16ths works best on extreme slope