Over the last year or so I have come to the conclusion that my dust extraction system was inadequate. I had started out with a WV2 LVHP vacuum which are very good vacuums collecting small particles. However I was asking it to extract from my 16" planer thicknesses, a 12" table saw, spindle (all in a combination machine), a band saw and a mitre saw. So I added a collection bagging system and 115mm drain pipe as ducting. To say it was struggling is an understatement. Having read as much as possible on the subject including Bill Penz excellent research I realised that I may as well not bother collecting any as only collect 75 to 80% when looked at from a health point of view.
This year I decided to do something. The choices were either go for a Chip collector that would spew the fine dangerous particles all over the workshop, go for a clean air system which would cost a fortune or put the system outside. Having read about the chip extractors the best I could find was the Jet DC1100: http://www.axminster.co.uk/jet-dc1100a- ... ckage-deal. It offered the air movement rate that could achieve clean air but still spewed the fine dust back into the workshop so I decided to put it outside. I also read about ducting and learnt that bends are bad. In fact so bad that if you had say three bends you were wasting your time installing ducts so I had to work out how to connect a Jet DC1100 to the duct system. I also read that 6" ducting really is the smallest size we should consider if we want clean air.
The solution was to hang the motor and fan of the DC1100 from the ceiling and connect the ductwork straight into the fan port thus eliminating two bends. The next problem was that the vortex cone collector and filter were now further away from the fan so I installed more ductwork from the fan to the collector. This is all outside in its own little shed. The downside with a system like this outside is that it is sucking the equivalent of 18 air changes per hour from my workshop.
I still have one bend as the ductwork comes from the ceiling down to my combination machine but that is a very slow bend and doubles up as an access hatch if the system blocks.
I finally got all of this installed and running and spent a day machining up a large pile of oak. The good news is that it works very well. It is providing the sort of air flow that keeps the workshop clean, there were no blockages and it coped with the air changes (I must have a leakier workshop then I thought).
The point of the thread is simply to say that we all need to review our dust control systems from time to time. Sometimes we find that what we thought was adequate or something we could live with turns out to be inadequate and from a health point of view worse than doing nothing. The problems are resolvable without spending a fortune.
This year I decided to do something. The choices were either go for a Chip collector that would spew the fine dangerous particles all over the workshop, go for a clean air system which would cost a fortune or put the system outside. Having read about the chip extractors the best I could find was the Jet DC1100: http://www.axminster.co.uk/jet-dc1100a- ... ckage-deal. It offered the air movement rate that could achieve clean air but still spewed the fine dust back into the workshop so I decided to put it outside. I also read about ducting and learnt that bends are bad. In fact so bad that if you had say three bends you were wasting your time installing ducts so I had to work out how to connect a Jet DC1100 to the duct system. I also read that 6" ducting really is the smallest size we should consider if we want clean air.
The solution was to hang the motor and fan of the DC1100 from the ceiling and connect the ductwork straight into the fan port thus eliminating two bends. The next problem was that the vortex cone collector and filter were now further away from the fan so I installed more ductwork from the fan to the collector. This is all outside in its own little shed. The downside with a system like this outside is that it is sucking the equivalent of 18 air changes per hour from my workshop.
I still have one bend as the ductwork comes from the ceiling down to my combination machine but that is a very slow bend and doubles up as an access hatch if the system blocks.
I finally got all of this installed and running and spent a day machining up a large pile of oak. The good news is that it works very well. It is providing the sort of air flow that keeps the workshop clean, there were no blockages and it coped with the air changes (I must have a leakier workshop then I thought).
The point of the thread is simply to say that we all need to review our dust control systems from time to time. Sometimes we find that what we thought was adequate or something we could live with turns out to be inadequate and from a health point of view worse than doing nothing. The problems are resolvable without spending a fortune.