Features
- ENHANCED DUST CONTROL: Keep your workspace clean with this 10-foot shop dust collection hose kit, designed to easily connect to a wide range of power tools and workshop vacuums.
- VERSATILE ADAPTABILITY: With five different threaded fittings, this dust collector hose is compatible with popular tools like orbital sanders and biscuit joiners, allowing you to tackle various DIY projects with ease.
- SUPERIOR FLEXIBILITY: Our flexible vacuum hose has an anti-kink design ensuring unrestricted airflow and preventing blockages while maintaining optimal suction during woodshop dust collection.
- RUGGED DESIGN: Constructed from puncture-resistant materials, this durable shop vacuum hose extension withstands rigorous use in any woodworking workshop, ensuring long-lasting performance.
- ⚠️IMPORTANT: Due to variations between manufacturers, shop vacuum port sizes are not universal. To ensure a proper fit, please carefully review the detailed product images and listed dimensions to verify the adapter's size and configuration fit your specific application before ordering.
Specifications
Color | Black |
Size | Hose w/ 5 Fittings |
Unit Count | 1 |
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A 10-foot dust collection hose kit for connecting power tools and workshop vacuums, supplied with five threaded fittings to fit a range of tool ports. The flexible, anti-kink hose is made from puncture-resistant material to preserve airflow and resist wear during use. Due to variation in manufacturer port sizes, check the adapter dimensions against your equipment to ensure a proper fit.
Peachtree Woodworking Supply 10 Foot Long Dust Collection Power Tool Hose Kit for Multiple Types/Brands of Power Tools and Work Shop Vacuums with Threaded Fittings Review
Why I tried this dust hose kit
My small-shop dust strategy starts at the tool: keep the hose light, flexible, and close to the source. That’s exactly the role the Peachtree hose kit fills. It’s a 10-foot, narrow-bore hose with a handful of adapters that promise to mate to a variety of tool ports and small shop vacuums. I put it to work on a mix of sanders, a trim router, a biscuit joiner, and then pushed it on a table saw and miter saw to see where it taps out.
Setup and compatibility
Out of the box, you get the hose and five adapters—some rubber, some hard plastic. The hose itself is threaded and the fittings screw on. Note that the spiral of the hose means you tighten by turning the adapter counterclockwise; once you register that muscle memory, swapping fittings is quick.
A couple of practical observations from setup:
- The rubber adapters have just the right firmness to grip common tool outlets without cracking or deforming. On several tools they slid on snugly; on one sander I wrapped a single layer of electrical tape on the tool port for a perfect press fit.
- The hard plastic adapters are great for tools with more rigid, consistent ports (e.g., portable table saw dust chutes). They seat positively and don’t wobble.
- The kit’s collars are intended for this hose’s threaded end. If you’re trying to marry this to an existing 2–2-1/4 inch friction-fit hose, you’ll likely need a separate sleeve or a silicone coupler. The included pieces aren’t designed to slip over standard 2-1/4 inch shop-vac hose cuffs.
For vacuums, the small size suits compact canister or 1–2.5 gallon shop vacs beautifully. I also ran it on a mid-size shop vac through a small cyclone. It sealed well and didn’t collapse or kink, even under strong suction.
Because tool and vac port sizes are all over the map, I strongly recommend measuring your ports and looking up the adapter dimensions before committing. That’s not a knock on this kit; it’s the reality of dust extraction hardware.
Performance and airflow
This is a narrow hose—by design. The trade-off is straightforward:
- Pro: Higher velocity at the tool with a small vac, excellent for fine dust.
- Con: Less volume overall, which limits chip capture on machines that fling or produce a lot of waste.
On orbital sanders, a trim router with a decent shroud, and a biscuit joiner, capture was excellent. With the hose shortened to about 6 feet (more on cutting later), I saw virtually no visible dust pluming off the work. The sanding pad stayed cleaner, and the filter on the vac clogged more slowly thanks to the cyclone pre-separation.
Where the hose feels out of its element is on tools that need volume, not just velocity. On my contractor-style table saw, it removed fine dust but struggled with chip evacuation from the lower cabinet compared to a 2-1/2 inch setup. On a miter saw—always a worst-case test—it made a dent in airborne dust when the hose was positioned close to the blade guard, but it’s not a substitute for a high-CFM, larger-diameter system or a well-designed hood. That’s an unfair ask of any narrow-bore hose.
Clogs? None with sanding and routing dust. Planer shavings or long stringy chips would be a bad matchup; that’s not the target application.
Flexibility and handling
The hose is notably supple. It resists kinking even with tight bends around a benchtop, and it’s light enough that it doesn’t yank a small sander out of your hand. With a compact vac, you’ll feel some tug if you run the full 10 feet fully stretched. Cutting the hose down to the length you actually need makes a big difference in handling and suction.
The hose threads tightly into the collars, so the fittings don’t pop off mid-cut. Swapping adapters takes a few seconds, which is fine for bench work. I appreciate that the hose doesn’t develop “memory” coils that fight you; it lies where you put it.
Durability and build quality
The outer jacket feels tough and puncture-resistant without being stiff. Dragging it over bench edges and hardware didn’t scuff it up, and stepping on a loop didn’t collapse it or crack a rib. The rubber adapters haven’t split under repeated on-off cycles, and the hard plastic adapters haven’t chipped. I’d still avoid yanking the hose by the adapter—the usual good practice—but the kit seems built for the real world.
No claims are made for anti-static properties, and I didn’t observe any special treatment. If you work with very fine plastics or in dry environments, plan to manage static the way you normally would (grounding, humidification, or anti-static hose if needed).
Where it shines
- Handheld power tools: Orbital sanders, detail sanders, trim routers, biscuit joiners, oscillating multi-tools with dust boots—this is a strong match. The hose is light, the airflow is focused, and you can keep the run short to improve performance.
- Small vacs and mobile cleanup: Paired with a 1–2.5 gallon vacuum or a compact cordless vac, this kit is perfect for quick, localized dust capture without wrestling a heavy 2-1/2 inch hose.
- Tight spaces: The anti-kink behavior and small diameter let you route it where chunky hoses won’t go.
Where it falls short
- High-volume chip collection: Table saw lower cabinets, miter saw hoods, planers, and jointers want bigger hose and more CFM. Use a 2-1/2 inch system (or larger) there.
- Integrating with existing friction-fit hoses: The threaded collars are for this hose. If you expect to snap this onto a standard 2-1/4 inch shop-vac cuff with no extra parts, you may be disappointed. Plan on a coupler/sleeve if that’s your aim.
- Universal fit myth: Tool and vac ports vary wildly. This kit covers a lot of ground, but you may still need a wrap of tape or a separate adapter for perfect fits on some brands.
Tips for getting the best results
- Cut to length: Don’t be afraid to cut a shorter segment for benchtop tools and keep the remaining length for a second station. Shorter hose runs improve suction and reduce tool drag.
- Test-fit the adapters before threading them on: Identify the adapter that gives the most secure, airtight fit to your tool or vacuum port, then screw it onto the hose.
- Position matters: On miters and routers, aim the hose opening as close to the dust source as possible; an inch closer can noticeably improve capture.
- Mind the thread direction: The hose winds into the collars counterclockwise. If it feels like it’s fighting you, reverse direction.
- Measure first: A quick check with calipers saves headaches. Match your tool port outer diameter and vacuum port/cuff inner diameter to the adapter range you plan to use.
Value
There’s a lot to like for the price: a durable, flexible hose and five adapters that cover most small-tool scenarios. Compared with brand-specific hoses, this kit delivers comparable capture on handheld tools without the premium cost, provided you’re comfortable with the reality that “universal” often benefits from a little tape or a coupler here and there.
Final recommendation
I recommend the Peachtree dust collection hose kit for anyone looking to improve dust capture on handheld tools with a small shop vacuum. It’s light, flexible, and tough enough for daily use, and the threaded adapters cover a wide range of ports with minimal fuss. Keep in mind its narrow diameter: it excels at fine dust extraction at the source, not high-volume chip collection. If your priority is sanding, routing, or detail work and you value maneuverability, this kit is a smart, cost-effective upgrade. If you’re outfitting a table saw cabinet, miter saw station, or planer, look to a larger-diameter system and more CFM instead, and treat this hose as a tool-specific complement rather than a whole-shop solution.
Project Ideas
Business
Jobsite Dust-Control Rental Kits
Offer short-term rentals of the 10' hose kit (with all five fittings) to contractors and remodelers who need temporary dust control to meet jobsite cleanliness or local regulation requirements. Provide pickup/drop-off, and optional on-call support to fit adapters to customer tools.
Fit-Right Adapter Service + Bundled Kits
Launch an online service where customers submit their tool port dimensions or photos; you ship a matched hose kit (or a custom-fit adapter) guaranteed to fit. Upsell bundles for trades (cabinetmakers, finishers) with a downdraft board, dust bags and quick-connect fittings.
Retail Demo & Class Program
Partner with local hardware stores or makerspaces to run live demos and short classes on dust management using the hose kit. Sell starter kits at events and create refill/consumable packages (replacement hoses, filters, clamps) as repeat-revenue items.
Contractor Co-Branding & Subscription Supply
Work with local contractors or specialty tool dealers to co-brand the hose kit as a recommended accessory. Offer a subscription for replacement hoses, clamps and consumables (filter bags, connectors) so trade customers get scheduled shipments and you build recurring revenue.
Creative
Downdraft Sanding Station
Build a portable downdraft sanding top: route the 10' hose into a wheeled cabinet with a perforated plywood/screen top and a filter bag. Use the multiple threaded fittings to attach the vac to different sanders or to create a direct-port for a bench sander. The anti-kink, puncture-resistant hose preserves airflow while you sand to reduce airborne dust and get cleaner finishes.
Quick-Change Mobile Dust Cart
Assemble a compact rolling cart that stores the hose, vacuum and a rack of the five threaded adapters. Add quick-connect mounts for an orbital sander, router, jigsaw and biscuit joiner so you can pop on the correct adapter and move between jobsites. The 10' length gives room to work away from the vac without tripping over cords.
Saw-Cover Dust Hood
Fabricate a lightweight hood for a miter or table saw that captures blade dust and port it to the hose with the best-fit threaded adapter. Include viewing slots and hinged panels for blade changes. This reduces cleanup time and keeps the shop cleaner when crosscutting large stock.
Handheld Detail Extraction Tool
Make a slim hand-held extraction wand or adapter that mates the hose to a detail sander, flush-trim router or sanding block for tight corners and trim work. Use the puncture-resistant hose and small-diameter fittings to maintain suction in narrow spaces for finish sanding and dust-free detail work.