Dust collectors?

Started by Lightyear, January 24, 2009, 04:25:27 PM

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Lightyear

Anyone here using one?  For years I've suffered with the dust and chips and the complaints from the wife about the mess.  Once I get my storage shed built I'll be starting to transoform my garage into a workable shop of sorts.  At this point I'm thinking of something along the lines of a single stage, 1hp Jet, Grizzly or Delta with an upgraded 5 micron bag - space and cost are both issues.

Dave W

I have a 2hp Jet, it's more than adequate for my needs. Keep in mind that a DC by itself won't be much use on a table saw without extra measures (which I've never taken). It works well for most other uses, especially jointing, planing and thickness sanding.

If I were out in the shop every day, I'd probably do more. I'd buy an overhead air cleaner before I'd buy the micron bags. YMMV.

drbassman

When I have a few bucks, I'm going to upgrade my vac for better dust collection and also install an overhead unit for the small particle stuff.  Overall, will probably cost $400 for both but worth it.  My shop is permanently in the basement, so I need to work on this issue too.
I'm fixin' a hole where the rain gets in..........cuz I'm built for a kilt!

godofthunder

This is something I will need to look into as well.
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Lightyear

I plan on running some permanent trunk lines on the walls and ceiling to accomodate multiple connections and will utilze blast gates.  Keep in mind that I will permanently have half of my two car garage as shop and that I'll have the other half when the boss lady's Jeep is backed out - so most of tools will be moblie to a certain degree. I'm also looking at the ceiling hung filter unit as well - Grizzly seems to have a better deal on these.

Plus, as a sign of getting old, I'm starting to worry about all of the dust I've been breathing in after 30 years of wood work.

shadowcastaz

I built a  filter box 20"x20" about desk height  some years ago . I use 2  furnace filters in 2 stages and a squirel cage fan in the bottom. sucks air in top , blows out bottom . I put a  waffle screen from a florescent light / ceiling fixture on top, over 1st filter and use it as a sanding station. panel on front  is fascened with wingnuts for filter changes and  easy motor access. simple light switch on side . 2 wheeles  and a foot make it easy to move

at 1st it was cumbersome.  Once i added the waffle screen it became a very handy sanding station .
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Barklessdog

We had a huge Enco one here at work, but ended up no one want to change the bag, so we gave it away. We installed overhead exhaust fans.

drbassman

Quote from: shadowcastaz on January 25, 2009, 08:24:13 PM
I built a  filter box 20"x20" about desk height  some years ago . I use 2  furnace filters in 2 stages and a squirel cage fan in the bottom. sucks air in top , blows out bottom . I put a  waffle screen from a florescent light / ceiling fixture on top, over 1st filter and use it as a sanding station. panel on front  is fascened with wingnuts for filter changes and  easy motor access. simple light switch on side . 2 wheeles  and a foot make it easy to move

at 1st it was cumbersome.  Once i added the waffle screen it became a very handy sanding station .


Cool idea, I might try something like that for sanding.  I love making my own stuff.  I still use my home made router table.  Sanding dust is a big pain for sure!  Commercial units cost hundreds.  Very smart Shadow!


I'm fixin' a hole where the rain gets in..........cuz I'm built for a kilt!

Dave W

That's fine as an air cleaner. It's not a substitute for a dust collector.