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shop dust collection

Best can be big $$$. I'd settle for effective and reliable. I believe I have effective and it has been very reliable, but...

This is a timely question, because I'm considering, due to general service life, upgrading from my 20-some year old 650cfm 2-bag Jet dust collector with then-upgraded felt bags. Doubling the CFM would be a good starting point for my thinking. I don't care about chips- things that drop to the floor are easy, it's the stuff that hangs in the air that I want to control and capture. My Raffan-inspired dust hoods (seach me for that over the past year of so) have been working wonderfully, but my current collector won't live forever, that's why it is on my mind.

I used to use a metal trash can and separator lid to pre-filter the air stream of heavies. I took it out- I wasn't sending much heavy stuff to it, it added greatly to the noise in the shop, and after removal I noticed the suction went up. And I saved a few square feet of floor space.

Here's a link from a recent discussion mentioning a couple custom fabric bag companies. I want fabric, not pleated filters. I feel high quality top and bottom fabric filter bags will provide more filter surface and less suction drop than a single pleated filter and plastic lower bag.
Post in thread 'Cleaning DC filter' https://www.aawforum.org/community/threads/cleaning-dc-filter.24755/post-278901
 
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To add...

-Avoid flexible plastic duct. Use 26ga. (not lighter 28ga.) smooth sheet metal duct and elbows for as much of the system as possible, should be available from your local big box stores. Use 3 equally spaced sheet metal screws per joint to hold them together. Support the duct along its length with plumbing J-hooks or metal strapping.

-I avoid height changes in the duct runs. I have my ducts running along the walls at the similar height of the source of the dust. Why fight gravity if you don't have to?

-In the direction of air flow, the crimped end of the duct goes into the uncrimped end of the next downstream duct section. This lessens air leakage at joints, and less clogging of debris.

-Seal all duct joints, at connections and along the length, with UL181 labeled metal foil tape or paint-on duct mastic (messy). Even tape the joints of elbows. Sealing prevents air leakage and suction drops at the points of use.

-2 elbows forming a long-sweep bend may(?) be more efficient than a single elbow making a short-sweep bend. 90° elbows restrict air as much as 5' of straight pipe. Plan your layout carefully.

-Blast gates leak air. Cheap gates leak more air. Buy good blast gates. Good ones are expensive. Or, turn tapered wood plugs to jam into the ends of branch openings when a branch is not in use, think a cork in a bottle. They won't leak any more air than blast gates, and maybe less if you build them well. And they cost almost nothing.

-Keep branches as short as possible to maintain suction efficiency. Consider where the collector and machines are located relative to each other.

The thread of my dust hoods at each lathe. They have proven to be very effective at grabbing airborne dust before it can leave the area of the lathe. Just today, on my long bed lathe, I was sanding spindles 24" away (down the bed) from the duct inlet, and dust was still being pulled into my hood enclosure. More about them in this thread-

There are probably other things I'm not thinking of, but these points, building a good duct system, will go far to make any collector as efficient and effective as possible.
 
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