Tool Grinding dust. Is this still a real health concern if I just wear a n90 mask when grinding/sharpening lathe tools? Black dust still gets all over the workbench and nearby. I’m using a Sorby ProEdge. (linisher -belt sander type sharpener)
I have a JET JDCS-505 metal dust collector stand, which I picked up on a refurb deal. Having measured with my Dylos after some moderately extended grinding, it's 100% clear that it's not even close to adequate to control fine dust. For the record, those tests were with a Baldor 8" grinder, its stock guards and their collection outlets, and a Stuart Batty grinding platform (i.e. very close set around a CBN wheel).To date, no one makes a metal dust collector for the home shop
I think it's possible to do a lot better, but I haven't tried yet(**). The first problem is to completely redesign the guards so that they have any hope of intercepting nearly all of the fine dust ejected from the wheel.
I've been toying with the idea of making downdraft table, enclosing the grinder as much as reasonable, getting a cheap harbor freight dust collector, and venting it outside. Even in winter it would just be short bursts that shouldn't kill the heating too bad.
I just need to find a large enough shut off value or damper for the outside vent. Better would be a two way so I could also vent wood dust outside during warmer weather.
With the space requirements to sweep the wings, I think this will end up looking more like a specialized fume hood. Which is fine, assuming you have the metal dust collector CFMs to drive it.Be far better to design one specifically for sharpening, though.
That's essentially my whole shop extractor fan. I open a garage door, kick the fan on, and there's a breeze. But it's too much and a bit too loud to run continuously.A good friend of mine mounted a 3’ fan in the wall behind his lathe
Apropos of Aaron's comments, airborn dust control is an inherent feature of a wet wheel system, like Tormek. Of course one then has to dispose of the slurry in the water trough. (Pouring it down the drain is not necessarily a good idea).
At one time I found references to dust collectors used in industry that had spark guard filters.
BTW, note that some people have expressed concern that using a dust collection system to suck up steel dust from a grinder might be a fire hazard if a spark found it’s way to dust somewhere in the duct.
LOL there's been days I've been tempted to do the same...I think I'm gonna sell everything in my shop and use the space to paint watercolors.
Same here-It occurs to me more and more that turning wood , in addition to being enormously messy, expensive and potentially dangerous in so many ways, also requires the learning of literally dozens of separate skills more or less all at once. I was chatting with a fellow turner on Instagram about this. And some days in the shop, nothing goes right, and you wish you had never opened your shop door that morning. And then another day you finish a piece that turns out even nicer than you had hoped, and you're back in it deeper than ever. It's a sickness, I tell ya!LOL there's been days I've been tempted to do the same...