How To Install A Dust Collector Through A Wall!! Small Shop Dust Collection

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • Every woodworking shop should have some kind of dust collection! Not only does this help keep the shop clean and easier to work in but it is also much safer as the dust can cause many breathing and lung problems if inhaled over time. With a small shop it can be difficult to find a balance in have a good dust collection system and also finding the room for the system to be mounted. Well I think I have found the best of both worlds. I decided to install my dust collection system half inside and half outside of the shop with the motor and separator outside of the shop attached to the exterior and the return filter and secondary dust catch in the interior of the shop. This helps with a few different problems. One is saving room in the shop by only half of the system being inside and taking up space in the work area of the shop. The second is this system will retain all of the heating and air conditioning in the shop as well as not starve the dust collector for air flow by returning the cleaned air back into the interior of the shop. Let me know what you guys think and if you have any questions. Leave them in the comments below and I will answer them the best I can.
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Комментарии • 18

  • @philhugill8458
    @philhugill8458 6 месяцев назад

    Fantastic info....great ideas.....thanks !!!

  • @johndowning2231
    @johndowning2231 4 месяца назад

    I have a similar arrangement that I want to modify to move the separator/motor and catch pan outside, and then leave the filter and catch bag inside. That will give me some significant space.

  • @anyfoolknowthat
    @anyfoolknowthat 3 года назад +1

    Impressed; I’m still going to vent outside (without coming back in) but it’s nice to see someone even more dedicated to solving the dust riddle

  • @SomeGuy8796
    @SomeGuy8796 Год назад +6

    ALL THAT AND YOU PUT THE FILTER INSIDE? ... why??

    • @Halloween-Taken-Seriously
      @Halloween-Taken-Seriously 6 месяцев назад

      I would assume it’s so that his shop remains the same temperature and his dust collector doesn’t take out the warm air during winter or the cold air during summer

  • @unitwoodworking5403
    @unitwoodworking5403 4 года назад +1

    Great and huge dust collector, thanks for useful tools and detailed explanation

  • @mhaz49
    @mhaz49 4 года назад +1

    Great info. I've been looking for a way to move the motor and impeller outside and you've shown me how. Just have to figure out placement so the neighbors don't get too upset.

  • @nickhildenbrandt4529
    @nickhildenbrandt4529 4 года назад +3

    As an FYI that installation definitely violates electrical code. You need a 36" deep and 30" wide space in front of the panel. Your dust collector is very much in the way. The heater and ducting is also a bit of an issue as there is supposed to be 6.5' of height as well. You might not care, but figured I would point it out if you cared about compliance.

    • @jpaynewoodworking7510
      @jpaynewoodworking7510  4 года назад

      Hey thanks for letting me know. There is about 6 and 1/2 in around the heater. Possibly a little more especially on the height side. As far as the panel. Wasn't a lot I could do as far as that goes it is as far away from the panel as possible and could not mount it on the other side due to all of the two locations. That being said access to the panel is zero problems the door opens freely without ever touching the filter so not a huge problem for me. Thanks though I appreciate it.

  • @jerrynpatti
    @jerrynpatti 3 года назад +3

    Why didn't you just vent it outside? You would not be fighting back pressure from the filter.

    • @jpaynewoodworking7510
      @jpaynewoodworking7510  3 года назад +1

      You not fighting pressure from the filter though. The air from the filter is the same air that's been pulled from the shop. And if it was vented outside it would cause to 2 issues I wanted to avoid. One is that if having to run the system for any extended amount of time it would remove any warm or cool air from the inside of the shop and vent it to the outside. Next if all the doors in the shop are closed it would start to pull a vacuum on the shop itself as it is simply pulling the air from inside and releasing it outside creating essentially a vacuum chamber inside the shop as well as could lead to air starvation issues with the dust collecter

    • @donhill1825
      @donhill1825 3 года назад +1

      @@jpaynewoodworking7510 I have to agree with jerrynpatti. The primary purpose of dust collection is to save your lungs from harm. In this setup, the dust with the most potential for harm is recirculated into the shop & being pushed through a filter, which *absolutely* reduces CFM compared to venting outside. Yes, you might have to crack a door or window, but I'd rather throw a coat on or *not move the collector at all* than go to all that trouble putting a hole in the wall for the net benefit of moving a trash can outside.

  • @donhill1825
    @donhill1825 3 года назад +5

    I genuinely don't understand venting back into the shop. I live in the very cold northeast but prioritizing heating the shop over lung health, system efficiency & simplicity doesn't make sense to me.

    • @jpaynewoodworking7510
      @jpaynewoodworking7510  3 года назад +2

      If you vent the air outside it will do two different hing it will kot only remove air (ie. Heat or AC) from the inside of the shop and vent it outside. Also if you vent the air completely outside depending on how tight you shop is for ventalation and gapping it will start to pull a vaccume on the shop itself as it removes more air over time than can be pulled through the interior vents. Also the filter on the system is designed to run entirely in the shop as lost people do so your not being any wors on your lungs than any other dust collection system inside a shop. I'm simply saving workspace inside by having the motor and separator outside.

    • @merriemerrie7378
      @merriemerrie7378 3 года назад +1

      I agree. It seems to me that the advantages of venting to the outside, especially since most of the system is already out there, would outweigh any rationale for bringing the dust exhaust line back into the shop for filtration. In this situation, I would be inclined to put the whole system outside and just increase air ventilation into the shop. So you end up with superior fresh air circulation, superior dust extraction and less noise. The trade off would seem to be loss of cooled or heated air. Use a radiant heater in winter and high fan venting in summer. Saves money and better for your health.

  • @mutigers88
    @mutigers88 3 года назад

    Great Video ... Thanks!!!