Dust Knowledge Hub

Small rooms make dust control both easier and riskier: easier to enclose, but quick to saturate. The key is to prioritise capture at source, manage airflow under load, and keep housekeeping tight.

Start with the task list

  • Identify high emitters (cutting, chasing, sanding). Sequence them and consider off-hours to avoid crowding.
  • Use on-tool extraction and water suppression where suitable; slow cutting speeds reduce generation.

Right-size the equipment

  • Choose compact M/H-class vacuums with sealed bags; avoid overfilling to protect airflow.
  • Pick air scrubbers sized for the room volume; short duct runs reduce losses.
  • Use conductive hoses and secure connections to prevent leaks and nuisance shocks.

Control air paths

  • Close doors and seal gaps; create a simple make-up air path.
  • If exhausting, direct discharge away from occupants and intakes; consider negative pressure to stop migration.

Housekeeping without re-agitation

  • No sweeping or blow-downs. Vacuum ledges and floors regularly with M/H-class units.
  • Change pre-filters and bags before performance drops; keep spares on hand.
  • Bag and seal waste immediately, then remove from the room.

Monitor and adjust

  • Check PM2.5/PM10 periodically; if levels climb, pause and service filters or increase ventilation.
  • For respirable hazards, use H13/H14 final filtration and appropriate RPE.

Practical takeaways

  • Plan tasks to minimise simultaneous dust generation.
  • Keep airflow high under load with sealed bagging and short runs.
  • Validate with quick PM checks and adjust before work continues.

Small spaces reward good discipline. With source capture, tuned airflow, and zero-sweep housekeeping, you can maintain control and keep productivity high.

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