This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've noticed no
one has mentioned my biggest concern;
how do you keep the dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
I keep my tools in drawers rather than exposed.
And, yes, I have a 1 1/2 HP dust collector plus 3 shop vacs. Still, a lot
of sawdust escapes capture.
Max
On Wed, 21 Mar 2012 16:04:58 -0500, [email protected]
(Robert Bonomi) wrote:
>In article <[email protected]>,
>Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote:
>>On 3/20/2012 3:25 PM, Mike Marlow wrote:
>>> Swingman wrote:
>>>> On 3/20/2012 10:09 AM, Lee Michaels wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Pegboard advocates have a simple solution for dust control on their
>>>>> proudly displayed tools. They obsessively polish their tools while
>>>>> doing no actual woodwork. After all, if you don't make any saw dust,
>>>>> it is much easier to keep everything clean.
>>>>
>>>> It just looks that way.
>>>>
>>>> If you use your F*e*s*t*o*o*l, you will simply have little to no dust
>>>> to worry about!
>>>>
>>>> ;)
>>>
>>> Gotta get me a Festool 4 1/2 in angle grinder. That's definitely the worst
>>> culpret in my garage for filthy, dusty messes. I was thinking of saving
>>> some money though and just getting a 23 year old red head to clean my shop.
>>> (Robert - I'm talking FEmale).
>>>
>>
>>In the long run "that 23 year old" will cost you more money.
>
>A wise man once said:
> "There is nothing more expensive than a woman who is 'free for the evening'."
As a often divorced man of means once said. "If it flies, floats or
fucks rent it."
Swingman wrote:
> On 3/20/2012 10:09 AM, Lee Michaels wrote:
>
>> Pegboard advocates have a simple solution for dust control on their
>> proudly displayed tools. They obsessively polish their tools while
>> doing no actual woodwork. After all, if you don't make any saw dust,
>> it is much easier to keep everything clean.
>
> It just looks that way.
>
> If you use your F*e*s*t*o*o*l, you will simply have little to no dust
> to worry about!
>
> ;)
Gotta get me a Festool 4 1/2 in angle grinder. That's definitely the worst
culpret in my garage for filthy, dusty messes. I was thinking of saving
some money though and just getting a 23 year old red head to clean my shop.
(Robert - I'm talking FEmale).
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
"Max" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've noticed
> no one has mentioned my biggest concern;
> how do you keep the dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
> I keep my tools in drawers rather than exposed.
>
Pegboard advocates have a simple solution for dust control on their proudly
displayed tools. They obsessively polish their tools while doing no actual
woodwork. After all, if you don't make any saw dust, it is much easier to
keep everything clean.
<grin, duck and run>
"Lee Michaels" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
"Max" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've noticed
> no one has mentioned my biggest concern;
> how do you keep the dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
> I keep my tools in drawers rather than exposed.
>
>Pegboard advocates have a simple solution for dust control on their proudly
>displayed tools. They obsessively polish their tools while doing no actual
>woodwork. After all, if you don't make any saw dust, it is much easier to
>keep everything clean.
<grin, duck and run>
I think that deserved a <snerk>
"Steve B" wrote
"Max" <[email protected]> wrote
> This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've noticed
> no one has mentioned my biggest concern;
> how do you keep the dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
> I keep my tools in drawers rather than exposed.
> And, yes, I have a 1 1/2 HP dust collector plus 3 shop vacs. Still, a lot
> of sawdust escapes capture.
>
> Max
>I found that mounting 2" squares of 1/2" plywood behind the pegboard that
>spaces it off the wall helps. Dust will settle. Where I live, I have to
>deal with blowing sand, too. A woodshop has lots of tiny particles blowing
>all around. Every so often, I just take the blower nozzle, or even the
>leaf blower, and clean it out. You can't keep dust off your stuff. You
>can just clean it occasionally.
>Steve
Arizona? I have the same problem in El Paso. But my shop, amazingly, is
sufficiently "tight" that sand isn't nearly the problem that sawdust is.
Max
"Mike Marlow" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
Max wrote:
> This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've
> noticed no one has mentioned my biggest concern;
> how do you keep the dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
> I keep my tools in drawers rather than exposed.
> And, yes, I have a 1 1/2 HP dust collector plus 3 shop vacs. Still,
> a lot of sawdust escapes capture.
>
> Max
>I don't. But then, I don't mind some amount of dust on my tools. I do
>periodically blow off my peg boards as well as my shelves, etc. with a blow
>gun. Beyond that - what's a little dust?
>-Mike-
I guess it depends on one's definition of "little". ;-)
When it becomes difficult to determine the nature of the tool one is seeking
(is that a screwdriver or a chisel) the dust accumulation can become a
nuisance.
But, to be honest, the impetus for the question was seeing all those "dust
free" tools hanging on those "dust free" peg boards. ;-)
I have used a blow gun, often to my dismay when the clouds produced made
seeing difficult.
I know.............use the blow gun more often............
Max
"Jack" wrote in message news:[email protected]...
On 3/20/2012 3:12 PM, Max wrote:
> I guess it depends on one's definition of "little". ;-)
> When it becomes difficult to determine the nature of the tool one is
> seeking (is that a screwdriver or a chisel) the dust accumulation can
> become a nuisance.
> But, to be honest, the impetus for the question was seeing all those
> "dust free" tools hanging on those "dust free" peg boards. ;-)
>Since I was one of 3 that posted pictures:
>(http://jbstein.com/Flick/BenchBack1.jpg)
>I can tell you my peg board was there when I moved into the house in 1988
>and I never dusted, blew, vacuumed, washed or otherwise messed with dusting
>the pegboard, or any tools hanging on it. Tools like chisels and
>screwdrivers do not accumulate dust, the board itself doesn't either. Flat
>surfaces will, but I sure don't fret over it. If you are a clean freak
>there is a better than even chance you are in the wrong business.
>Jack
It may have been a bit of hyperbole to suggest that my tools lose their
identity from an accumulation of dust.
Since my chisels and screwdrivers have surfaces, however small, that aren't
necessarily vertical when hanging from a peg board hook they *do* tend to
accumulate dust.
I don't think I'm being anal when I find it bothersome.
But the bottom line here is that I was being facetious in the previous post.
Enjoy your dust. ;-)
Max
Max wrote:
>
> I guess it depends on one's definition of "little". ;-)
> When it becomes difficult to determine the nature of the tool one is
> seeking (is that a screwdriver or a chisel) the dust accumulation can
> become a nuisance.
Well - I don't go quite that far in my use of the phrase "a little dust...".
Though... my wife may disagree.
> But, to be honest, the impetus for the question was seeing all those
> "dust free" tools hanging on those "dust free" peg boards. ;-)
You won't find that here. I have a lot of tools, but I use every one of
them - except for the ones I forgot that I bought... No one could accuse me
of being a guy with a showcase of tools. My get used and I love it!
> I have used a blow gun, often to my dismay when the clouds produced
> made seeing difficult.
> I know.............use the blow gun more often............
>
Perish the thought. Half the fun of it is that big dust cloud and the nasty
stuff you blow out of your nose afterwards.
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
"Steve B" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Mike Marlow" <[email protected]> wrote
>
>> I don't. But then, I don't mind some amount of dust on my tools. I do
>> periodically blow off my peg boards as well as my shelves, etc. with a
>> blow gun. Beyond that - what's a little dust?
>
> I agree. When I walk into a professional's office (lawyer, financial man,
> etc), I am slightly taken aback with someone who has a very clean orderly
> desk. If they are busy, I expect some clutter. If there's no clutter, I
> think that he has nothing going on. I don't trust someone with a clean
> desk.
>
> Steve
+1
Nick.
In article <[email protected]>,
Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote:
>On 3/20/2012 3:25 PM, Mike Marlow wrote:
>> Swingman wrote:
>>> On 3/20/2012 10:09 AM, Lee Michaels wrote:
>>>
>>>> Pegboard advocates have a simple solution for dust control on their
>>>> proudly displayed tools. They obsessively polish their tools while
>>>> doing no actual woodwork. After all, if you don't make any saw dust,
>>>> it is much easier to keep everything clean.
>>>
>>> It just looks that way.
>>>
>>> If you use your F*e*s*t*o*o*l, you will simply have little to no dust
>>> to worry about!
>>>
>>> ;)
>>
>> Gotta get me a Festool 4 1/2 in angle grinder. That's definitely the worst
>> culpret in my garage for filthy, dusty messes. I was thinking of saving
>> some money though and just getting a 23 year old red head to clean my shop.
>> (Robert - I'm talking FEmale).
>>
>
>In the long run "that 23 year old" will cost you more money.
A wise man once said:
"There is nothing more expensive than a woman who is 'free for the evening'."
On 3/20/2012 1:32 PM, tiredofspam wrote:
> It's not big, but it's not as small as Swingman's shop. I used to work
> in a tighter space. It's kind of important to work efficiently and put
> things away. I am trying to learn the put things away routine.
Bingo! Not only important, imperative.
--
www.eWoodShop.com
Last update: 4/15/2010
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
http://gplus.to/eWoodShop
On 3/20/2012 10:09 AM, Lee Michaels wrote:
> Pegboard advocates have a simple solution for dust control on their
> proudly displayed tools. They obsessively polish their tools while doing
> no actual woodwork. After all, if you don't make any saw dust, it is
> much easier to keep everything clean.
It just looks that way.
If you use your F*e*s*t*o*o*l, you will simply have little to no dust to
worry about!
;)
--
www.eWoodShop.com
Last update: 4/15/2010
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
http://gplus.to/eWoodShop
Robert Bonomi wrote:
>>>
>>> Gotta get me a Festool 4 1/2 in angle grinder. That's definitely
>>> the worst culpret in my garage for filthy, dusty messes. I was
>>> thinking of saving some money though and just getting a 23 year old
>>> red head to clean my shop. (Robert - I'm talking FEmale).
>>>
>>
>> In the long run "that 23 year old" will cost you more money.
>
> A wise man once said:
> "There is nothing more expensive than a woman who is 'free for the
> evening'."
That's why God gave you two kidneys.
The 23 year old red head isn't cheaper. Buy the Festool.
Especially a red head. they are red headed for a reason. Usually a
fireball....
LOL.
On 3/20/2012 4:25 PM, Mike Marlow wrote:
> Swingman wrote:
>> On 3/20/2012 10:09 AM, Lee Michaels wrote:
>>
>>> Pegboard advocates have a simple solution for dust control on their
>>> proudly displayed tools. They obsessively polish their tools while
>>> doing no actual woodwork. After all, if you don't make any saw dust,
>>> it is much easier to keep everything clean.
>>
>> It just looks that way.
>>
>> If you use your F*e*s*t*o*o*l, you will simply have little to no dust
>> to worry about!
>>
>> ;)
>
> Gotta get me a Festool 4 1/2 in angle grinder. That's definitely the worst
> culpret in my garage for filthy, dusty messes. I was thinking of saving
> some money though and just getting a 23 year old red head to clean my shop.
> (Robert - I'm talking FEmale).
>
tiredofspam wrote:
> I don't dust them. I use them.
Preach it!
> My shop is 3 rooms.
> 1 storage... lumber racks. Hardware racks. Shares space with hanging
> laundry.
>
Way too much organization for me. How do you manage logistics like that?
> One hand tool shop... 3 workbenches, and a wall of peg board.
Just one wall? I thought you said you used peg board. 1 bay of my 3 bay
garage is my work area. All of the walls in that bay are pegboard. There
is no overhead door in that bay, so the entire front wall is pegboard. Some
shelving, but not a lot. Some cabinets, but not a lot. When I get serious
about a project, the car goes outside and at least one of the 2 other bays
becomes workspace. Sometimes, both - but only if it's a project for the
wife...
> Also old card catalog for organizing tools , knobs, bolts...stuff.
Card catalog? WTF? Do you mean you can actually tell every tool you've
ever bought? Wow...
> 2 old dressers store larger tools, and stuff. 3 wall cabinets too.
>
> one machine room, this is where the dust is created. I keep it clean
> though, I don't want to track the dust upstairs.
Yeah - I have one machine room too. It's called... the garage. See notes
above...
>
> And I use the hand tool room for finishing too.
>
> It's not big, but it's not as small as Swingman's shop. I used to work
> in a tighter space. It's kind of important to work efficiently and put
> things away. I am trying to learn the put things away routine.
Don't fall to the dark side brother. Remember - all of those flat surfaces
in your shop were created for a reason. Storage!
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
Max wrote:
> This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've
> noticed no one has mentioned my biggest concern;
> how do you keep the dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
> I keep my tools in drawers rather than exposed.
> And, yes, I have a 1 1/2 HP dust collector plus 3 shop vacs. Still,
> a lot of sawdust escapes capture.
>
> Max
I don't. But then, I don't mind some amount of dust on my tools. I do
periodically blow off my peg boards as well as my shelves, etc. with a blow
gun. Beyond that - what's a little dust?
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
On 3/20/2012 10:29 AM, Max wrote:
> This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've
> noticed no one has mentioned my biggest concern;
> how do you keep the dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
> I keep my tools in drawers rather than exposed.
> And, yes, I have a 1 1/2 HP dust collector plus 3 shop vacs. Still, a
> lot of sawdust escapes capture.
>
> Max
blow gun. or leaf blower.
--
Steve Barker
remove the "not" from my address to email
On Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:29:55 -0600, Max wrote:
> This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've
> noticed no one has mentioned my biggest concern; how do you keep the
> dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
I don't. I just brush, wipe, or blow it off when I need a seldom used
tool. Most of my tools get used often enough that there is little if any
dust buildup on them.
I can just see building drawers for all of my clamps :-).
--
Intelligence is an experiment that failed - G. B. Shaw
"Max" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've noticed
> no one has mentioned my biggest concern;
> how do you keep the dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
> I keep my tools in drawers rather than exposed.
> And, yes, I have a 1 1/2 HP dust collector plus 3 shop vacs. Still, a lot
> of sawdust escapes capture.
>
> Max
I found that mounting 2" squares of 1/2" plywood behind the pegboard that
spaces it off the wall helps. Dust will settle. Where I live, I have to
deal with blowing sand, too. A woodshop has lots of tiny particles blowing
all around. Every so often, I just take the blower nozzle, or even the leaf
blower, and clean it out. You can't keep dust off your stuff. You can just
clean it occasionally.
Steve
"Max" <[email protected]> wrote
> Arizona? I have the same problem in El Paso. But my shop, amazingly,
> is sufficiently "tight" that sand isn't nearly the problem that sawdust
> is.
>
> Max
I don't know the forensic analysis of whatever is accumulated on my shop
accoutrements, but "stuff" is stuff.
Steve
"Mike Marlow" <[email protected]> wrote
> I don't. But then, I don't mind some amount of dust on my tools. I do
> periodically blow off my peg boards as well as my shelves, etc. with a
> blow gun. Beyond that - what's a little dust?
I agree. When I walk into a professional's office (lawyer, financial man,
etc), I am slightly taken aback with someone who has a very clean orderly
desk. If they are busy, I expect some clutter. If there's no clutter, I
think that he has nothing going on. I don't trust someone with a clean
desk.
Steve
"Steve Barker" <[email protected]> wrote
>
> blow gun. or leaf blower.
>
> --
> Steve Barker
Open all the doors. Put up all fans you can find. Blow and blow and blow.
And stop and have a beer. Repeat until you are satisfied.
Werks fer me.
Steve
On Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:16:07 -0700, Steve B wrote:
> I found that mounting 2" squares of 1/2" plywood behind the pegboard
> that spaces it off the wall helps. Dust will settle.
Are you saying that the dust settles *behind* the pegboard? Wouldn't
that be a fire hazard?
--
Intelligence is an experiment that failed - G. B. Shaw
"Steve B" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
>
> "Larry Blanchard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> On Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:16:07 -0700, Steve B wrote:
>>
>>> I found that mounting 2" squares of 1/2" plywood behind the pegboard
>>> that spaces it off the wall helps. Dust will settle.
>>
>> Are you saying that the dust settles *behind* the pegboard? Wouldn't
>> that be a fire hazard?
>
> I guess if you let it build up for sixty or more years, yes, it could.
> Otherwise, the normal shop guy will go through there with an air
> blaster at least every two years.
>
> Steve
>
If you leave the bottom open, dust will be able to drop out naturally and
there will never be any build up. There will be some collection, but
after a point it won't continue building.
Puckdropper
--
Make it to fit, don't make it fit.
"Puckdropper" <puckdropper(at)yahoo(dot)com> wrote
> If you leave the bottom open, dust will be able to drop out naturally and
> there will never be any build up. There will be some collection, but
> after a point it won't continue building.
>
> Puckdropper
I figured I'd leave the bottom open just so spiders, mice, and other vermin
could have an easy way to come and go, and not set up housekeeping on a
permanent basis.
Steve
On 3/21/2012 10:57 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
> "Steve B"<[email protected]> wrote in
>>> Are you saying that the dust settles *behind* the pegboard? Wouldn't
>>> that be a fire hazard?
>>
>> I guess if you let it build up for sixty or more years, yes, it could.
Well that's good, I still have a few years to go before I clean out
behind my peg board...
>> Otherwise, the normal shop guy will go through there with an air
>> blaster at least every two years.
> If you leave the bottom open, dust will be able to drop out naturally and
> there will never be any build up. There will be some collection, but
> after a point it won't continue building.
I assume the guy that installed my pegboard 50 or so years ago also ran
a copper grounding wire eliminating the need to dust behind the pegboard...
My Gawd, what are you guys, school teachers or something... sheesh!
--
Jack
Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life.
http://jbstein.com
"Larry Blanchard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:16:07 -0700, Steve B wrote:
>
>> I found that mounting 2" squares of 1/2" plywood behind the pegboard
>> that spaces it off the wall helps. Dust will settle.
>
> Are you saying that the dust settles *behind* the pegboard? Wouldn't
> that be a fire hazard?
I guess if you let it build up for sixty or more years, yes, it could.
Otherwise, the normal shop guy will go through there with an air blaster at
least every two years.
Steve
On 3/20/2012 3:37 PM, Swingman wrote:
> On 3/20/2012 1:32 PM, tiredofspam wrote:
>
>> It's not big, but it's not as small as Swingman's shop. I used to work
>> in a tighter space. It's kind of important to work efficiently and put
>> things away. I am trying to learn the put things away routine.
>
> Bingo! Not only important, imperative.
The key to putting stuff away is to have a specific place for everything.
With Pegboard, it's important to have no free pegs hanging around. Any
empty pegs and I know someone (wife, kids) borrowed a tool. They never
put them back and If you don't jump on it right away, you will find them
years later when you fix the broken "junk" drawer and you find your
voltage tester screwdriver under a pile of dried up pens, missing
rulers, pliers and so on and so forth.
I have a million drawers and the wife has to ask where that stuff is, so
I know she borrowed something. Peg board is out in the open, where they
can find it. No empty pegs is the rule here.
--
Jack
Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life.
http://jbstein.com
On 3/20/2012 3:12 PM, Max wrote:
> I guess it depends on one's definition of "little". ;-)
> When it becomes difficult to determine the nature of the tool one is
> seeking (is that a screwdriver or a chisel) the dust accumulation can
> become a nuisance.
> But, to be honest, the impetus for the question was seeing all those
> "dust free" tools hanging on those "dust free" peg boards. ;-)
Since I was one of 3 that posted pictures:
(http://jbstein.com/Flick/BenchBack1.jpg)
I can tell you my peg board was there when I moved into the house in
1988 and I never dusted, blew, vacuumed, washed or otherwise messed with
dusting the pegboard, or any tools hanging on it. Tools like chisels
and screwdrivers do not accumulate dust, the board itself doesn't
either. Flat surfaces will, but I sure don't fret over it. If you are
a clean freak there is a better than even chance you are in the wrong
business.
> I have used a blow gun, often to my dismay when the clouds produced made
> seeing difficult.
> I know.............use the blow gun more often............
If you use a blow gun, you blow dust around. If you worry about it, you
should use a vacuum with a dust brush attachment.
--
Jack
Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life.
http://jbstein.com
On 3/20/2012 3:25 PM, Mike Marlow wrote:
> Swingman wrote:
>> On 3/20/2012 10:09 AM, Lee Michaels wrote:
>>
>>> Pegboard advocates have a simple solution for dust control on their
>>> proudly displayed tools. They obsessively polish their tools while
>>> doing no actual woodwork. After all, if you don't make any saw dust,
>>> it is much easier to keep everything clean.
>>
>> It just looks that way.
>>
>> If you use your F*e*s*t*o*o*l, you will simply have little to no dust
>> to worry about!
>>
>> ;)
>
> Gotta get me a Festool 4 1/2 in angle grinder. That's definitely the worst
> culpret in my garage for filthy, dusty messes. I was thinking of saving
> some money though and just getting a 23 year old red head to clean my shop.
> (Robert - I'm talking FEmale).
>
In the long run "that 23 year old" will cost you more money.
On Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:29:55 -0600, "Max" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>This peg board discussion has been interesting but as far as I've noticed no
>one has mentioned my biggest concern;
>how do you keep the dust off the "stuff" that's mounted.
That's a messy problem.
>I keep my tools in drawers rather than exposed.
Tool cabinets and kitchen-style cabinets here.
>And, yes, I have a 1 1/2 HP dust collector plus 3 shop vacs. Still, a lot
>of sawdust escapes capture.
A known 'illegal' tool, the dreaded rubber-tipped, non-OSHS air blow
gun will work wonders and move dust off the tool into the air.
--
When you are kind to someone in trouble, you hope they'll remember
and be kind to someone else. And it'll become like a wildfire.
-- Whoopi Goldberg
I don't dust them. I use them. My shop is 3 rooms.
1 storage... lumber racks. Hardware racks. Shares space with hanging
laundry.
One hand tool shop... 3 workbenches, and a wall of peg board.
Also old card catalog for organizing tools , knobs, bolts...stuff.
2 old dressers store larger tools, and stuff. 3 wall cabinets too.
one machine room, this is where the dust is created. I keep it clean
though, I don't want to track the dust upstairs.
And I use the hand tool room for finishing too.
It's not big, but it's not as small as Swingman's shop. I used to work
in a tighter space. It's kind of important to work efficiently and put
things away. I am trying to learn the put things away routine. I just
bought a harbor freight cart item # 90428 for $49.99 that is actually
helping. I put all the tools I am using on the cart, except chisels..
That way I don't clutter up my work area. I can then roll them back to
my shop and put them back on the peg board, or in the draws.
On 3/20/2012 3:12 PM, Max wrote:
>
> I guess it depends on one's definition of "little". ;-)
> When it becomes difficult to determine the nature of the tool one is
> seeking (is that a screwdriver or a chisel) the dust accumulation can
> become a nuisance.
> But, to be honest, the impetus for the question was seeing all those
> "dust free" tools hanging on those "dust free" peg boards. ;-)
> I have used a blow gun, often to my dismay when the clouds produced made
> seeing difficult.
> I know.............use the blow gun more often............
>
> Max
On Wed, 21 Mar 2012 04:12:14 +0000 (UTC), Larry Blanchard
<[email protected]> wrote:
>On Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:16:07 -0700, Steve B wrote:
>
>> I found that mounting 2" squares of 1/2" plywood behind the pegboard
>> that spaces it off the wall helps. Dust will settle.
>
>Are you saying that the dust settles *behind* the pegboard? Wouldn't
>that be a fire hazard?
For only $473.16, I'll sell you my microvac adapter for your shop vac.
It's a tiny sucker!
--
Knowledge speaks, but wisdom listens.
-- Jimi Hendrix