I just bought a new cabinet saw the TSC-10HB. I have a massive DC hooked
up to it and yet, there is dust spewing out of it. well, not as much as
the contractor saw I put up with for more years and I am prepared to
admit. I have looked at the cabinet part and there are wholes in it
every where and basically the manufacturer has put a lot of faith in
gravity alone to attract the dust to the lowest point of the cabinet.
I am wondering if this is a normal phenomenon with TSC-10HB (i.e., dust
spewing out of it despite a massive DC being hooked to it). Also is
there anything I could do, or anyone has done to reduce the dust getting
out of the cabinet.
cheers
Al
On Jun 17, 1:30 am, Chris Friesen <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> One of these days I'm going to get some chunks of magnetic sign material
> and use them to block off the slots for the front adjustment wheel.
>
*tip-of-the-hat*
Brilliant idea... consider that one stolen.
r---> who loves good ideas..anyone's.
Upscale wrote:
> I will assume by "wholes" you mean holes and that's your problem. Everywhere
> that air can exit the saw cabinet, dust will follow, so your only solution
> is to seal as many as you can except for the dust collection port. Tape on
> cardboard, sheet plastic, whatever works and then you should see some
> improvement.
Note that you need some space for the air to get *into* the cabinet...at
least as much total area as the dust collection port. The trick is to
have the air coming in through places where there isn't dust trying to
go out.
One of these days I'm going to get some chunks of magnetic sign material
and use them to block off the slots for the front adjustment wheel.
Chris
"Chris Friesen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> Note that you need some space for the air to get *into* the cabinet...at
> least as much total area as the dust collection port. The trick is to
> have the air coming in through places where there isn't dust trying to
> go out.
Yes, you're right, but even a zero clearance insert should allow sufficient
air flow to stream dust into the cabinet and then into the dust collector
port. As well, most saw blades (at least combination blades) have gullets
which also allows a substantial amount of air flow to be directed into the
cabinet.
"Al" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> admit. I have looked at the cabinet part and there are wholes in it
> every where and basically the manufacturer has put a lot of faith in
> gravity alone to attract the dust to the lowest point of the cabinet.
I will assume by "wholes" you mean holes and that's your problem. Everywhere
that air can exit the saw cabinet, dust will follow, so your only solution
is to seal as many as you can except for the dust collection port. Tape on
cardboard, sheet plastic, whatever works and then you should see some
improvement.
Upscale wrote:
> "Chris Friesen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> Note that you need some space for the air to get *into* the cabinet...at
>> least as much total area as the dust collection port. The trick is to
>> have the air coming in through places where there isn't dust trying to
>> go out.
>
> Yes, you're right, but even a zero clearance insert should allow sufficient
> air flow to stream dust into the cabinet and then into the dust collector
> port. As well, most saw blades (at least combination blades) have gullets
> which also allows a substantial amount of air flow to be directed into the
> cabinet.
>
>
Thanks guys,
you already answered my first question. obviously it is happening. I
used the saw and paid more attention to where actually the saw dust was
getting out and the worst offender is the blade pushing it out into the
guard. It looks like I would have to implement some sort of DC tube to
the guard or perhaps buy one. do you know if you could change the guard
on TSC-10HB ?
"Al" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:46750c8b$0$992
> guard. It looks like I would have to implement some sort of DC tube to
> the guard or perhaps buy one. do you know if you could change the guard
> on TSC-10HB ?
Depends on how much you want to spend. Here's a few examples.
http://www.amazon.com/Exaktor-EXOA-2-Table-Overarm-Collector/dp/B000EZXYWM/ref=pd_bbs_1/103-7503742-9247845?ie=UTF8&s=hi&qid=1182084681&sr=1-1
http://www.woodsmithstore.com/210165.html
"Al" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I just bought a new cabinet saw the TSC-10HB. I have a massive DC hooked
> up to it and yet, there is dust spewing out of it. well, not as much as
> the contractor saw I put up with for more years and I am prepared to
> admit. I have looked at the cabinet part and there are wholes in it
> every where and basically the manufacturer has put a lot of faith in
> gravity alone to attract the dust to the lowest point of the cabinet.
>
> I am wondering if this is a normal phenomenon with TSC-10HB (i.e., dust
> spewing out of it despite a massive DC being hooked to it). Also is
> there anything I could do, or anyone has done to reduce the dust getting
> out of the cabinet.
>
You mean, other than an overhead guard?