Bh

"Brad"

24/03/2006 5:59 AM

Homemade dust collector

If anyone is interested in looking, I made my own shop dust collector
this year. It was made mainly with surplus materials I had sitting
around - the benifit of never throwing anything away.
The fan unit came from an old industrial furnace. The unit has a 2
stage chip seperator, a bag filter, and uses furnace filters for the
final filter stage.
You can see details on my web site:
http://www.hardingpens.com/workshop-dc.html
There are pictures of the unit and even a file of the initial CAD
drawing plan with dimensions.
I am quite happy with the unit. It is very quiet and does a great job
at removing dust from my lathe, belt sander, and other shop tools.
Enjoy,
Brad
HardingPens.com


This topic has 2 replies

DN

Dave Nay

in reply to "Brad" on 24/03/2006 5:59 AM

24/03/2006 9:25 AM

Brad, Do you still have the SolidWorks model for this?

Dave

Brad wrote:
> If anyone is interested in looking, I made my own shop dust collector
> this year. It was made mainly with surplus materials I had sitting
> around - the benifit of never throwing anything away.
> The fan unit came from an old industrial furnace. The unit has a 2
> stage chip seperator, a bag filter, and uses furnace filters for the
> final filter stage.
> You can see details on my web site:
> http://www.hardingpens.com/workshop-dc.html
> There are pictures of the unit and even a file of the initial CAD
> drawing plan with dimensions.
> I am quite happy with the unit. It is very quiet and does a great job
> at removing dust from my lathe, belt sander, and other shop tools.
> Enjoy,
> Brad
> HardingPens.com
>

Ww

"WConner"

in reply to "Brad" on 24/03/2006 5:59 AM

24/03/2006 2:39 PM

I checked out your dust collector. I have been using a similar unit for
about 20 years. Mine was derived from plans published in two different
magazines years ago, possibly Popular Mechanics and Mechanics Illustrated.
These were the Wood Working magazines as well as other topics of the era.
Mine is belt driven and I sped it up above normal speed. As you said, it
works well. Many have said it is not possible to get enough CFM with a
squirrel cage blower to use as dust collector. Undoubtedly, the newer
impeller models do a much better job. I have considered the build it
yourself version of these from Wood Magazine of 10 years or so ago. When I
built mine, home dust collector units were virtually unheard of. Mine has a
4" Inlet and 4" Outlet. I use 4" plastic thin wall drain pipe for the main
runs, $4 - $5 for 10 Ft. I also use flex dryer hose to connect which lasts a
long time and is cheap to replace. I made my own Blast Gates from scrape
wood with tempered Masonite slides. Dust collector is centrally located and
serves 2 band saws, thickness planer, wood lathe, table saw, radial arm saw,
6" belt sander, 1" belt sander permanently with flex hose for router,
jointer, drill press, hand sanders and whatever else.

Walt Conner

> If anyone is interested in looking, I made my own shop dust collector
> this year. It was made mainly with surplus materials


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