Eliminate the unsafe distraction of turning on and off your dust collection system while you're operating a shop tool! The iVac Pro consists of two main components, the Pro Switch and the Pro Tool, both sold separately in your choice of 240V or 115V. A complete iVac Pro System gives you wireless control of your dust collection system, automatically turning it on/off every time you turn on/off a one of your shop tools. Technical Details: Automatically turns your dust collection system on or off. iVac Pro Switch connects to any wall outlet and provides an outlet for your dust collection system. iVac Pro Tool connects to any wall outlet and provides an outlet for a shop tool. Wirelessly connect up to eight iVac Pro Tool boxes (each sold separately) to an iVac Pro Switch for multi-tool coverage. Able to run two or more power tools at the same time without interference (turning off one tool won't turn your dust collection system off if another tool is still running. Turn on delay helps avoid power surges from your dust collection system and a power tool turning on at the same time. The iVac Pro Switch and Tool each have a three-position mode switch: Auto/Off/On. 40' line-of-sight range between the iVac Pro Switch and iVac Pro Tool boxes. Allows your dust collection system to run for six seconds or longer after you shut off your shop tool for total dust elimination. iVac Pro Tools may be configured for longer shut off times to allow for dust clearance on longer dust runs. Two input power cords are independently protected by built-in 15Amp circuit breakers, allowing for situations when combined power from your tool and dust collection system exceed 15 Amps. Boxes are wall mountable. ETL safety approved - conforms to UL STD 244A and SCA STDC22.2 No. 14.
M**R
Works, but designed by a 60's egghead without any common sense.
It works as advertised, but whoever designed this had to be on mind-altering drugs, and the instructions had to be written by an engineer writing technical manuals. So, it controls up to 8 tools. You would think the tool would have 8 switches, right. Wrong. The tool and the controller (called a switch) all have 6 toggle switches (very small toggle switches). The controller is set using only the first 2 toggles for 4 combinations (off off/on off/off on/on on). Apparently the other 4 toggles don't do squat. This gives you System Addresses A,B,C,D. Pretty clear eh? Just a thought...8 switches in every box. That might even be intuitive, don't you think? Or, just 4 in the switch and 8 in each tool controller?Then for the first tool you want to control, on the separate tool controller (which also has 6 toggles) you toggle on switch 4. Obvious right? The second tool you want to control, you turn on toggle 5, and the third you turn on toggles 4 and 5...up to tool 8 that has ALL THE switches on OFF. If you remember the binary system and hex codes from high school math, this will be a snap for you (after you read the instructions a dozen times). Still not sure what the 4 systems do (A,B,C,D). My guess is that you can have 4 of these, each controlled 8 tools. Anyone have 32 tools they need to hook up to vacs?Anyway, it works, and appears to be the only game in town unless you want to walk back and forth between your table saw and dust collector. Without this I tend to forget to turn on the vac, and thus my shop has always been covered in fine dust. Hopefully this solves the problem. Good luck setting up your system.
K**R
Five Stars
Works well.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
2 weeks ago