kas20amc02 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 13, 2025 3:38 pm
Hi guys. Thanks for the additional tips. I have read through the posts a few times and there are certainly some things I don’t understand yet. For example, what is a “key way stock?”
For sawdust collection, I have been using a shop vac in conjunction with a N95 mask. I’m using the extra space in my detached three car garage for my work area.
For pending projects, I would like to make some open topped wooden boxes for my daughter and a few picture frames, including one with a slot for kid’s artwork to rotate in and out. I’m currently making some mahjong tile racks. These have proved much harder to make with a table saw, then the 4 inch models I made with a band saw.
I plan on reading your posts a few more times when I get some more time. I appreciate the tips.
Thanks,
Karl
Karl,
A good quality shop vacuum can actually do quite well for dust collection with a Mark V. The dust port on the Mark V lower saw guard, e.g. only has a 2.25" ID (for connecting to 2.5" diameter hose). IF you were running 4" dust hose or larger a shop vacuum just would not work, but I actually get slightly better airflow performance with my ShopVac™ setup than my Shopsmith DC-3300. This is because the DC-3300 is an anemic dust collector and doesn't even reach its marketed specs. I have written about this ad nauseam on this forum.

Using a HEPA cartridge filter and ShopVac™'s HEPA filter bags, but also making sure the unit has good sealing all around, I get very good dust collection without blowing excess fine dust back into my shop through the vacuum exhaust. Generally speaking dust collectors like the DC-3300 with cloth filter hoods are NOT recommended and many in woodworking call these dust blowers because much of the fine sawdust just gets blown around the shop (12" tall filter hood only filters downs to 7µm and the 24" filter hood down to 5µm, but the 42" filter hood filters down to 1µm). For comparison, most good HEPA filters filter well down to 0.3µm, which is why a HEPA filter is superior at saving your lungs in woodworking. Okay, so here is the caveat, any dust collector with a HEPA filter will clog fast on something like sawdust causing a quick drop in airflow performance. You can prolong the life of the filter and better maintain airflow if you put a cyclone in front of the dust collector. I have a ClearVue Cyclone Mini cyclone, the CV-06. Unfortunately, the owners of ClearVue Cyclones are retiring and it looks like the business is not going to continue. Oneida, of course, makes the Dust Deputy and almost everyone and their cousin has one of these, except for me. I don't like the very bottom unit because it is too small and doesn't separate well enough IMHO. There is a much larger version of the budget cyclone from Oneida (
https://www.oneida-air.com/dust-deputy/ ... -separator) that I would pony up for if I was buying again today. Keep in mind any cyclone put in front of a shop vacuum will decrease its airflow, i.e. that fine dust separation comes at a price. You might see as much as a 20% loss in airflow in a small cyclone design like this, but honestly it is worth it to preserve the expensive HEPA filter and maintain airflow as the filter fills up. Another reason to have a beefy shop vacuum.
Those sound like really fun projects. Feel free to post pictures and info on them either to share, or if you run into a challenge with a project. There are several talented woodworkers on this forum that are more than willing to offer suggestions. Enjoy!