Apologies if I missed this in the previous posts. Jon, do you have a dust extractor? That's your best option to remove fine particulates. The Rikon 1100 is under $400.
I have a Fein Turbo I dust extractor, along with a bucket vortex, that I use for turning and sanding dust collection. It is ok. I also have an overhead Jet air filter, which generally keeps the air clean. I'm extremely sensitive to dust, though, and its not really enough. Plenty of dust doesn't get captured. Primarily the super fine dust from my higher grit sanding.
I did a lot of research a couple years ago, well, maybe three years ago now? It came down to ClearVue CV1700, or maybe one of the Oneida dust collection setups. When I fully priced out all the necessary ducting and blast gates and all that, it was over $6000, and I just couldn't do it at the time. I was pretty dead set on the CV1700...the Pentz cyclone seems to do a better job at separation than any other vortex, which minimizes how often the filters need to be cleaned. I also thought at the time that ClearVue had the better filter design.
At the time, I also read all of Bill Pentz's site on dust collection, the general design of your "commercial" dust collection systems, and the rather poor quality of collection power (not enough CFM at ports, you can only get so much power from 1-2HP!), separation (vortex design, how much dust and chips are actually dumped into the bin vs. let through the impeller) and filtration (just not good enough in terms of micron level actually filtered). I had been to some workshops at Woodcraft, and they I think have a big Laguna vortex DC there. When I walked in the first time, I thought the air looked hazy, and by the time I left, I was quite stuffed up.
I hadn't read Pentz's content at that point, and I didn't really understand. Since reading Pentz's content, it was clear why I had problems...most commercial grade dust collectors lack on several levels: not enough horsepower, as 1-2hp when you do the math, is usually not enough to actually maintain sufficient CFM at the collection ports to collect EVERYTHING (the finest dust being the most important and also what requires the most CFM), not the most optimal vortex designs, so while most chips are dumped into the bin more dust is not and allowed through the impeller, which then leads to filtration...and while many of the commercial grade systems state ratings down to 0.2 microns, actual testing shows that they often don't filter lower than 2 microns, and most seem to have this "rubbing armature" that you rake back and for to scrape dust off the inside of the filters...which just destroys the filters and reduces their filtering capacity even more, allowing more fine dust back into the air. Doesn't seem to matter the brand for the most part, as far as I could tell when I researched...Jet, Laguna, Grizzly, Powermatic, etc.
The only two that seemed to consistently come up as doing a particularly good job at all three of these factors: Power, Separation & Filtration, were Oneida and ClearVue. (Its been three years, not sure if there are any other options these days.) Both offered impellers with horsepower up to 5hp or more, which was necessary for the size of my shop and the size/lengths of ducting I would have to use, and both seem to use a better vortex design (I don't know if Oneida actually uses a Pentz style vortex, but it looks very similar to the ClearVue Pentz design) so that most of the dust and chips get dumped into the bin, which lightens the load on the filters, which are legit designed to filter down to 0.5 microns at 99.999% efficiency.
I felt that ClearVue with their ability to stack two of their filters for huge filtration area, and the legitimate Pentz vortex design paired with 5hp, was the best bang for the buck. Today, with them gone, it looks like a comparable Oneida is about $4500...which would bring everything with all the necessary ducting and electrical work to something like $7500 or so, even more if I went with all metal ducting instead of pvc. Its just out of my price range... But, I have enough problems with wood dust, that if I invest in a system, I want to make sure I'm really getting enough collection power at the intakes and enough filtration to ensure no dust gets pumped back into the atmosphere. My shop is also my garage, and despite always using my Fein dust extractor and Jet air filter, a fine layer of dust always covers everything, including the cars and and everything else in the other 2/3rds of the garage.