Inspired by
Jay Bates I built something to house a Makita saw (a bargain from a nice chap on here!) The Makita was an MLS100 which seemed to throw the dust out from one port only so I left the shelf for the saw short of the back wall and underneath it I hung an inverted pyramidal box with a shop vac connected at the bottom. Most of the dust bounced off the wall, dropped into the box, slid down the sloping walls and into the vacuum below. Some of the dust would bounce back far enough to coat me and everything else for yards around. I tried sourcing some of the heavy grade rubber or plastic strips you sometimes see in butcher's shops' counters to prevent flies getting to the meat but ended up cutting and doubling up strips of an old shower curtain. This helped dirrect more dust towards the dust box AND was (mostly) flexible enough to allow mitre cuts. It worked well.
Last year I upgraded to a sexy little Dewalt number that ejects dust from here, there and everybluddywhere, all over EVERYTHING. As I rearrange the shop (AGAIN), I've been looking to address this messy problem. I started by positioning the saw on an oversized sheet of ply and marking the arc it covered for mitres to left and right as well as the bevel. That gave me this:
I cut a hole in the base board and connected the dust extractor to it. First test I couldn't actually see what was happening, partly because so much dust come bouncing off this backwall and into my face. There wasn't much dust immediately behind the saw so that part of the extraction was working well but there was masses of it to the left hand side and some - although nowhere near as much - to the right. I found out why on subsequent trials. When the light was right I could see the dust racing round the curve like riders on an old wall of death.
I gave up on any notions of trying to contain this with shower curtain strips and only briefly entertained a solid plywood wall that could clip on/off as required.So now I have this:
In situ:
So far, it has stopped so much of the dust being thrown back into my face, there's next to nothing to the right and a lot, lot less to the left. That I think is coming out through the channel I'd routed to house the curved wall so I've been filling that up with sealant. Obviously this will only be useable fo 90 degree cuts so I've fitted wings to the outside of the walls and toggle clamps secre it in place while allowing for a quick removal for mitres or bevels. Still a work in progress but feeling hopeful.