Gu

Glen

06/10/2006 9:05 PM

Air Cleaner

I'm looking to get an air scrubber for my shop. I've read articles on
several and am leaning toward the JDS 14022 750-ER Air Cleaner, mostly
based on recent reviews in 'Wood' magazine.

Does anyone have any background/experience w/this unit?

Anyone have other suggestions of another one I should be looking at?

Thanks,
Tex


This topic has 8 replies

rf

"roemax"

in reply to Glen on 06/10/2006 9:05 PM

07/10/2006 1:54 PM

Glen
I have the JDS 750
a good unit
you don't realize what the dust collection system is letting pass till you
see this units
profiler.
I would recommend the purchase
"Glen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In article <[email protected]>,
> [email protected] says...
> >
> >
> > On Oct 6, 5:05 pm, Glen <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > I'm looking to get an air scrubber for my shop. I've read articles on
> > > several and am leaning toward the JDS 14022 750-ER Air Cleaner, mostly
> > > based on recent reviews in 'Wood' magazine.
> > >
> > > Does anyone have any background/experience w/this unit?
> > >
> > > Anyone have other suggestions of another one I should be looking at?
> >
> > JDS gets rated highly in the reviews. That said, I'd take a hard look
> > at my existing dust collection system before I'd buy an air cleaner.
> > Capturing the dust at the source is the way to go.
> >
> > JP
> >
> >
> Thanks, guys. I have a dust collection system that catches nearly all
> of the the big stuff but fine dust that gets into the air and is not
> captured. It settles out on things and/or penetrates to places I don't
> want it(including my lungs, I'm sure). That's the leftover dust I'm
> looking to capture.
>
> Glen
>

Aa

"Andy"

in reply to Glen on 06/10/2006 9:05 PM

06/10/2006 2:18 PM

Glen wrote:
> I'm looking to get an air scrubber for my shop. I've read articles on
> several and am leaning toward the JDS 14022 750-ER Air Cleaner, mostly
> based on recent reviews in 'Wood' magazine.
>
> Does anyone have any background/experience w/this unit?
>
> Anyone have other suggestions of another one I should be looking at?
>
> Thanks,
> Tex

If you have the time and motivation to make your own, you can have a
couple hundred bucks towards some other tool. I made one from an old
dryer motor (blower still attached), a box with 1x2 pine frame covered
with hardboard/masonite, and a couple furnace filters. It's better to
have the filters at least a few inches in front of the intake, so more
of the filter media gets used rather than just the portion immediately
in front of the intake. I can get some pictures if you're really
interested, or you can google for more ideas.
Good luck,
Andy

JP

"Jay Pique"

in reply to Glen on 06/10/2006 9:05 PM

06/10/2006 5:00 PM



On Oct 6, 5:05 pm, Glen <[email protected]> wrote:
> I'm looking to get an air scrubber for my shop. I've read articles on
> several and am leaning toward the JDS 14022 750-ER Air Cleaner, mostly
> based on recent reviews in 'Wood' magazine.
>
> Does anyone have any background/experience w/this unit?
>
> Anyone have other suggestions of another one I should be looking at?

JDS gets rated highly in the reviews. That said, I'd take a hard look
at my existing dust collection system before I'd buy an air cleaner.
Capturing the dust at the source is the way to go.

JP

md

mac davis

in reply to Glen on 06/10/2006 9:05 PM

07/10/2006 8:45 AM

On Fri, 06 Oct 2006 21:05:24 GMT, Glen <[email protected]> wrote:

>I'm looking to get an air scrubber for my shop. I've read articles on
>several and am leaning toward the JDS 14022 750-ER Air Cleaner, mostly
>based on recent reviews in 'Wood' magazine.
>
>Does anyone have any background/experience w/this unit?
>
>Anyone have other suggestions of another one I should be looking at?
>
>Thanks,
>Tex

I have the Jet 1000-b, which I think is just about the same machine...

I used it on the shop ceiling and didn't think it did a whole lot of good until
I cleaned the filters... YUK!
It picked up a LOT of dust...

I've also used it in "saw horse" mode and it seemed pretty effective that way,
also... maybe a little bit better than ceiling mount..

The jury is still out on the new shop, but I'm leaning toward incorporating it
into the new router table as opposed to hanging it... not sure yet..

Whichever unit you get, buy at least an extra outer filter, if not an extra
inner one...
I vacuum the outside filter whenever I vacuum the shop, and take it outside and
blow it out with the compressor once in a while... as with all filters, new,
clean ones work best...

Mac

https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis
https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis/wood_stuff.htm

Pn

Prometheus

in reply to Glen on 06/10/2006 9:05 PM

06/10/2006 9:09 PM

On Fri, 06 Oct 2006 21:05:24 GMT, Glen <[email protected]>
wrote:

>I'm looking to get an air scrubber for my shop. I've read articles on
>several and am leaning toward the JDS 14022 750-ER Air Cleaner, mostly
>based on recent reviews in 'Wood' magazine.
>
>Does anyone have any background/experience w/this unit?
>
>Anyone have other suggestions of another one I should be looking at?

No suggestions as far as a stationary ceiling-monted one goes, but if
you happen to be on any kind of budget (and few aren't) I'd happily
suggest the portable Shop-vac air cleaner to anyone. I got one a
while back as a gift, but had my doubts about it's efficiency. After
using it for a variety of stuff, though, I've really come to enjoy it.
I mainly use it in my turnery, where it works like a charm for fine
sanding dust (and even collects a lot of heavier chips and shavings I
wouldn't expect it to) but I have also used it while sanding drywall
and demoing concrete. In each of the latter two cases, it seemed
perfectly able to trap most of the dust, and is extremely easy to
reposition and clean (you just upend it over a garbage can to empty-
fiter access is two phillips-head screws)

It's not a super-fine HEPA system, but it does work well for what it
is, and moves a lot of air. I believe the fiter is rated for 7
microns- not quite enough to completely filter extremely fine dust,
but generally good enough for airborne sawdust, IMO.

And the best part is it's right around $100. I think a guy can
replace the filter with a HEPA, if it means a lot to you.

Gu

Glen

in reply to Glen on 06/10/2006 9:05 PM

07/10/2006 1:44 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] says...
> Glen wrote:
> > I'm looking to get an air scrubber for my shop. I've read articles on
> > several and am leaning toward the JDS 14022 750-ER Air Cleaner, mostly
> > based on recent reviews in 'Wood' magazine.
> >
> > Does anyone have any background/experience w/this unit?
> >
> > Anyone have other suggestions of another one I should be looking at?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Tex
>
> If you have the time and motivation to make your own, you can have a
> couple hundred bucks towards some other tool. I made one from an old
> dryer motor (blower still attached), a box with 1x2 pine frame covered
> with hardboard/masonite, and a couple furnace filters. It's better to
> have the filters at least a few inches in front of the intake, so more
> of the filter media gets used rather than just the portion immediately
> in front of the intake. I can get some pictures if you're really
> interested, or you can google for more ideas.
> Good luck,
> Andy
>
>
Thanks, Andy

I appreciate the response but I think I'd prefer to go head and spend
the $$ and get a ready-made unit.

Tex

Gu

Glen

in reply to Glen on 06/10/2006 9:05 PM

07/10/2006 1:48 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] says...
>
>
> On Oct 6, 5:05 pm, Glen <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I'm looking to get an air scrubber for my shop. I've read articles on
> > several and am leaning toward the JDS 14022 750-ER Air Cleaner, mostly
> > based on recent reviews in 'Wood' magazine.
> >
> > Does anyone have any background/experience w/this unit?
> >
> > Anyone have other suggestions of another one I should be looking at?
>
> JDS gets rated highly in the reviews. That said, I'd take a hard look
> at my existing dust collection system before I'd buy an air cleaner.
> Capturing the dust at the source is the way to go.
>
> JP
>
>
Thanks, guys. I have a dust collection system that catches nearly all
of the the big stuff but fine dust that gets into the air and is not
captured. It settles out on things and/or penetrates to places I don't
want it(including my lungs, I'm sure). That's the leftover dust I'm
looking to capture.

Glen

n

in reply to Glen on 06/10/2006 9:05 PM

07/10/2006 4:49 AM

Local plumber did heating work also. Asked him to save me the two
speed blower from the removed unit and got a phone call in about three
weeks. Cost $8.00 for motor shop to identify wires and buy a switch.

On 6 Oct 2006 14:18:53 -0700, "Andy" <[email protected]> wrote:

>Glen wrote:
>> I'm looking to get an air scrubber for my shop. I've read articles on
>> several and am leaning toward the JDS 14022 750-ER Air Cleaner, mostly
>> based on recent reviews in 'Wood' magazine.
>>
>> Does anyone have any background/experience w/this unit?
>>
>> Anyone have other suggestions of another one I should be looking at?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Tex
>
>If you have the time and motivation to make your own, you can have a
>couple hundred bucks towards some other tool. I made one from an old
>dryer motor (blower still attached), a box with 1x2 pine frame covered
>with hardboard/masonite, and a couple furnace filters. It's better to
>have the filters at least a few inches in front of the intake, so more
>of the filter media gets used rather than just the portion immediately
>in front of the intake. I can get some pictures if you're really
>interested, or you can google for more ideas.
>Good luck,
>Andy


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