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Dust Collecting Dust collection is an important aspect of the beginner’s woodshop. You won’t be very popular if you are constantly tracking sawdust through the house nor will some of your tools work properly without a good dust collection system. For example, if you have a bench top or other thickness planer, it won’t work well without a good dust collecting system to draw the shavings away from the machine. This likewise applies to a joiner and drum or belt sander. Please Note: With any dust collecting system, the most important thing to maintain a ground between the machine being used and the dust collection system. Without this ground wire, you could cause a major fire in your shop and risk everything connected to your shop (like your house!). We suggest using metal gates and metal connectors at the woodworking machinery end. Buy the clear plastic dust collecttion hose with the spiral wire that you can see going through it. This can easily be grounded at each end of the hose to the metal gates and connectors. You can use all plastic gates, connectors, and hoses but then you have to run a wire from the woodworking machine to the dust collector. This is very cumbersome and usually lessens the possibility of having a grounded connection because of the frequency in moving the end of the dust collection hose that attaches to various woodworking machines. Check out the dust collection system pictures on Dave’s Woodshop on this site. This Oneida-Air system is a great system but will cost you about $1,500 and $2,000 dollars. The air bags allow no visible dust to escape, the system is relatively quiet, and has a lot of suction. For the beginner, you might be better off starting with a portable system on wheels. These can be purchased anywhere from $200 to $1,000. The important thing is you get one that doesn’t allow the fines to be discharged back into the room. These system can also be frustrating because you are constantly emptying them, and the filters or bags have to be cleaned frequently. This is not the case with the one shown in Dave’s Workshop. You also don’t need all of that automatic gate stuff which opens when you turn your machine on unless you have a lot of extra money. If you have a small workshop the size of a single car garage, a centrally located dust collection port(s) with manual gates will work great. For a few hundred dollars you will even be able to buy a remote control to turn your system on when you are ready to make some sawdust.
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