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When it comes to vacuum sources for the labf
When it comes to vacuum sources for the home lab, unfortunately cheap options are hard to come by. If you want an actually good laboratory vacuum pump, expect to shell out $500 for a used piece that is the minimum of good. Most of us home enthusiasts don't have that kind of money. We make due with repurposed;- Rotary vane vacuum pumps, most often used to dry water out of A/C lines and detect leaks. The main problem with this type of pump is that all of the air and gas you vacuum out of a vessel, travels through the pump oil, and degrades the seals and spoils the oil pretty fast. Certain chemicals broke the oil down in 1 run of less than 4 hours. I've killed a couple of cheap ones.
- There are diaphragm pumps similar to the rotary vane pumps in size and power consumption. They don't use oil, sonthey don't have that problem, but they don't draw a very strong vacuum. Not enough to be useful
- Chinese companies like Vevor make little diaphragm pumps for chemistry. Inside they are basically and aquarium pump and have very little volume clearing ability, but they can just barely muster a usable vacuum on a static load, and they start at about $175