Biggest things that I can remember during my DC system research.
Obviously, the longer the piping run is, less suction power. With that in mind, if you want to hook up several machines, put the blast gates as close to the DC as possible. This way the machine doesn't have to suck on a long line of piping for no reason at all.
Try for relatively straight piping runs. More torturous the path= less suction power.
Turns: The typical 90 degree turns you get with pvc pipe, etc are hard on the machine. Gradual curves make the air flow a lot better.
Main run should be as large as the machine can use. usually 6 inch. I noticed on my machine (1 1/2 standup DC) if I connect the 4 inch hose I get really good suction. When I connect the 2 inch line to my scroll saw, etc I don't feel as much suction at the end.
Designing a DC system for a small (or large) shop can be somewhat of an art form. Many people delve into CFM cacluations, etc. But if you keep the above in mind, you should be able to make a setup that will work for you.
And I think this is the longest post I've done here. My fingers hurt now. :cowboy:
edit.. almost forgot:
I view the ground wire in this way. I saw my DC system collecting stuff on the outside due to the static electricity generated. Basic copper wire, etc is cheap. I would rather install simple wire wrapped around the hose and ground it to be safe. Why take any chances with your safety. If you have metal ducting, it is simpler, just ground the end of each line. If you use plastic gates with metal ducting, simply jumper the wire across the gate to keep the circuit going.
I would rather spend 30 minutes installing all that wire, than the 4-6 hrs a trip to the ER might take.