what dust collection system works best in a 2 car garage + 200 sf room?
The best system is one that picks up dust at the source and leaves the air clean enough to breathe without making you sick, all at an affordable cost. Not a simple question.what dust collection system works best in a 2 car garage + 200 sf room?
Keeper info, thanks.Cartridge filters are great until they get clogged, and they will. Rule of thumb is 10 sq ft of filter area for each 100 cfm actual air flow. I had one industrial designer comment that he doubled that for systems using cartridges rather than bag filters. A cheap "dust collector" with undersized coarse filter bags is in effect a combined chip collector and dust pump.
To fine tune that, it's not how many machines you want to connect, it's how many machines need suction simultaneously. I'm guessing in a one-person home shop, it is likely never more than one machine needing dust collection at any given moment. Good quality blast gates can provide the service of isolating machines from the greater system. With good blast gates controlling each branch, you could effectively have as many branches as you need.I think a clear answer to your question would depend on how many machines you want to connect.
I’ve read the goal is 1200 to 1500 CFM at each tool. That much air movement seems to require about a 2 1/2 to 3 hp machine.what dust collection system works best in a 2 car garage + 200 sf room?
Cartridge filters are great until they get clogged, and they will. Rule of thumb is 10 sq ft of filter area for each 100 cfm actual air flow. I had one industrial designer comment that he doubled that for systems using cartridges rather than bag filters. A cheap "dust collector" with undersized coarse filter bags is in effect a combined chip collector and dust pump.

Cartridge filters are great until they get clogged, and they will. Rule of thumb is 10 sq ft of filter area for each 100 cfm actual air flow. I had one industrial designer comment that he doubled that for systems using cartridges rather than bag filters. A cheap "dust collector" with undersized coarse filter bags is in effect a combined chip collector and dust pump.


Ha, I'll have to remember that!I should do something, "dust on my eyeglasses" really isn't a reliable test, I suppose.
Will I use it constantly in my shop, or will I use it as a diagnostic tool to see if my dust collection/extraction habits and equipment are sound and reliable, or will it lead me to modifying usage and equipment to assure they are delivering as I hoped?
Are these "filter bags" HEPA rated? If not it wouldn't really matter too much how much surface area is available for fitering. The finest, most harmful, dust would just end up floating around in your shop to later settle on top of any surface that will hold it. I have been working with wood in my home shop for 40+ years and there are 2 things I've learned. The highest quality dust collection and hearing protection are at least as important as the tools you buy to work with wood. So my sollutions for dust collection have always included HEPA filters (once they became readily available) and sufficient suction to make sure the finest dust gets removed from my shop's air. Right now I have a cyclone with a HEPA filter and an air cleaner which attempts to filter the dust that escapes from the dust collector, and I almost always wear a powered helmet with a HEPA filter. Possibly this is overkill and was certainly expensive, but I feel every penny was well spent to protect my lungs. When I became a turner about 7 years ago, I installed a line from my dust collector to the lathe area. This won't pick up large shavings but it does get the dust from turning and sanding. What the collector doesn't (and there is some) the air cleaner gets, along with my helmet. I just feel you can't be too careful with your lungs.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
Are you asking for 'dust collection' or for 'air filtration'?what dust collection system works best in a 2 car garage + 200 sf room?




I will relate one experience I had. My shop is about the same size (576 sqf with 9ft ceiling). I have pvc ducting (4 stations with blast gates) going up through the attic then down to the DC which sits in a dedicated closet outside the shop in a carport. Orginally I had a delta canister type like the rickon pictured above in Kents picture. About 6 years ago I replace the Delta with a Laguna cyclone type. Both were 1.5hp but the cyclone type was near double the suction of the cannister type. I was amazed at the difference.what dust collection system works best in a 2 car garage + 200 sf room?