md

"mttt"

12/01/2004 5:19 PM

S-OT: Cathartic Dusting

...warm days are here in Denver, 50's or 60's. Had the garage doors open to
do a little sweeping, when I decided to take the Tim Allen approach and
exchange the broom for the leaf blower.

After blowing the dirt and grime out, I decided to point the blower over at
the workshop side of the garage!
I learned a couple of things:
- fine saw dust can stay suspended for a long time
- fine saw dust does not respond well to any attempt to direct it's travel
via a leaf blower
- about 5% of the pegs on a pegboard aren't really stuck-on all that well

All in all, that side of the garage seems cleaner. But I wonder if it's more
of a zero-sum game, in that all I did was spread it around?


This topic has 6 replies

CE

Clarke Echols

in reply to "mttt" on 12/01/2004 5:19 PM

13/01/2004 12:20 AM

Get a cyclone dust collector (from me, of course -- I make & sell 'em :-) )
and hook the blower outlet to a duct going outside. I can clear the air in
my 26 x 30 garage in under 4 minutes. Works nicely too when I fill the air
with welding smoke and need to freshen the atmosphere (takes less than
2 minutes), especially when the doors are closed and I need to clear it
out without losing all the heat. I'm 50 miles north of Denver in Loveland.

CE

mttt wrote:
>
> ...warm days are here in Denver, 50's or 60's. Had the garage doors open to
> do a little sweeping, when I decided to take the Tim Allen approach and
> exchange the broom for the leaf blower.
>
> After blowing the dirt and grime out, I decided to point the blower over at
> the workshop side of the garage!
> I learned a couple of things:
> - fine saw dust can stay suspended for a long time
> - fine saw dust does not respond well to any attempt to direct it's travel
> via a leaf blower
> - about 5% of the pegs on a pegboard aren't really stuck-on all that well
>
> All in all, that side of the garage seems cleaner. But I wonder if it's more
> of a zero-sum game, in that all I did was spread it around?

DW

Doug Winterburn

in reply to "mttt" on 12/01/2004 5:19 PM

12/01/2004 10:29 PM

On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 17:19:09 +0000, mttt wrote:

> All in all, that side of the garage seems cleaner. But I wonder if it's more
> of a zero-sum game, in that all I did was spread it around?

I use the blower gun on the compressor. Pretty much same results except
with greater control, I don't have to go looking for quite as many small
items on the floor and on the driveway. The compressor is mucho better
for blowing the sawdust off clothes before going in the house.

-Doug

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "mttt" on 12/01/2004 5:19 PM

12/01/2004 4:34 PM

"mttt" wrote in message

> All in all, that side of the garage seems cleaner. But I wonder if it's
more
> of a zero-sum game, in that all I did was spread it around?

My shop is not air-conditoned, so these 45 - 60 degree days are pure
pleasure for me, if not for the glue. It also means I have one big *ss,
industial size, roll-around fan that stays on during the summer when I am
resident. Whenever I leafblower the shop, I put that fan; pointing outside,
in the middle of the overhead door opening and turn it on Hurricane ... NO
airborn dust stays in the shop long.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 1/02/04

BS

"Bob Schmall"

in reply to "mttt" on 12/01/2004 5:19 PM

12/01/2004 12:56 PM


"mttt" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> ...warm days are here in Denver, 50's or 60's. Had the garage doors open
to
> do a little sweeping, when I decided to take the Tim Allen approach and
> exchange the broom for the leaf blower.
>
> After blowing the dirt and grime out, I decided to point the blower over
at
> the workshop side of the garage!
> I learned a couple of things:
> - fine saw dust can stay suspended for a long time
> - fine saw dust does not respond well to any attempt to direct it's travel
> via a leaf blower
> - about 5% of the pegs on a pegboard aren't really stuck-on all that well
>
> All in all, that side of the garage seems cleaner. But I wonder if it's
more
> of a zero-sum game, in that all I did was spread it around?

Don't blow it, dude. Suck it. Use a vacuum.

JP

Jay Pique

in reply to "mttt" on 12/01/2004 5:19 PM

12/01/2004 8:48 PM

On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 17:19:09 GMT, "mttt" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>...warm days are here in Denver, 50's or 60's. Had the garage doors open to
>do a little sweeping, when I decided to take the Tim Allen approach and
>exchange the broom for the leaf blower.
>
>After blowing the dirt and grime out, I decided to point the blower over at
>the workshop side of the garage!
>I learned a couple of things:
>- fine saw dust can stay suspended for a long time
>- fine saw dust does not respond well to any attempt to direct it's travel
>via a leaf blower
>- about 5% of the pegs on a pegboard aren't really stuck-on all that well
>
>All in all, that side of the garage seems cleaner. But I wonder if it's more
>of a zero-sum game, in that all I did was spread it around?

I've got an old Toro electric blower that also sucks. You put a bag
on the side and you can (sort of) suck up leaves and stuff. What it
*does* do well is suck up sawdust. The bag isn't great (I have no
idea how many microns), but I toss on the Dustfoe and go to town.
You'll probably want to wrap some wire mesh around the end to avoid
sucking up larger chunks.

JP

Bn

Bridger

in reply to "mttt" on 12/01/2004 5:19 PM

12/01/2004 11:44 AM

On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 17:19:09 GMT, "mttt" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>...warm days are here in Denver, 50's or 60's. Had the garage doors open to
>do a little sweeping, when I decided to take the Tim Allen approach and
>exchange the broom for the leaf blower.
>
>After blowing the dirt and grime out, I decided to point the blower over at
>the workshop side of the garage!
>I learned a couple of things:
>- fine saw dust can stay suspended for a long time
>- fine saw dust does not respond well to any attempt to direct it's travel
>via a leaf blower
>- about 5% of the pegs on a pegboard aren't really stuck-on all that well
>
>All in all, that side of the garage seems cleaner. But I wonder if it's more
>of a zero-sum game, in that all I did was spread it around?
>




if you're going to dust out your shop that way you gotta have some
positive airflow going on. the air has to be coming in one opening and
leaving via another. do you have another door or window on the wall
opposite the garage door? fill it up with box fans. you'll need enough
flow to change the air in the room in just a few minutes.


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