Alex said:
Gregor said:
antss said:
What we're talking about here amounts to just a few thousandths of a % in increased filtering with the "h" bag.
Which covers exactly the dust fraction you don't want to have in your air, as it is small enough to get deep into your lungs.
You're calculating with the wrong numbers.
The amount of dust generated at the source (the tool) that is not sucked up by the vac in the first place, is much larger than the amount the vac spews back into to air through its filter.
Why bother about a 0.005% gain in the vac when you've got your 10% right under your nose?
The absolute amount of dust isn't that interesting in the scenario, the size of the particles is what makes them dangerous.
Exaggerated to make the point: a whole log isn't dangerous (as long as you're not hit by it falling/rolling), but turning it into find sawdust and inhaling it is. The finer the particles the better and depper they can be inhaled, above a certain size the problem goes away.
antss said:
It is very,very unlikely that plain wood dust, fine or otherwise is going to kill you.
In case it would kill instantly we wouldn't have this debate as the results would be obvious.
Or even shorten your lifespan.It might give you asthma.
Fine dust is proven to be able to enter deep into the lungs, chemicals in (naturally created by the plant or later applied as treatment) or on (mold that grew on the lumber later) the wood are proven to be quite unhealthy.
Wood dust from many if not most species is, at least here in germany, rated as
likely to induce cancer - with a good list of them
without the
likely part. The M variants of the dust extractors are required for any commercial use.
Might be different in the US, from what I have read over the years the laws there seems to be less oriented toward prevention but cling to the fantasy of employing post-mortem litigation preventing people from doing harm to others (how good that works in terminal stage capitalism is highly debateable, anecdotal evidence points into a different direction).
My point was: as the extractors differ only marginal from each other and the bottom line of the BoMs insignificant, why not only one model that offers the best protection possible? For uses where the best possible filtering gets in the way (planex where you need AC without a filter bag, whatever) the extra filters could be removeable by pressing a green plastic lever...