CFM Requirements & Air Volume
Cubic Feet per Minute (CFM) is the fundamental measurement for dust collection system design. Proper CFM calculations ensure effective dust capture at each tool while maintaining adequate shop-wide air quality.
Professional dust collection calculator for woodworking shops. Calculate CFM requirements, ductwork sizing, static pressure, and system design with comprehensive air filtration optimization.
Configure your shop dimensions, equipment, and ductwork specifications to calculate comprehensive dust collection system requirements.
Cubic Feet per Minute (CFM) is the fundamental measurement for dust collection system design. Proper CFM calculations ensure effective dust capture at each tool while maintaining adequate shop-wide air quality.
Ambient CFM = (Length * Width * Height * ACH) / 60 Each woodworking tool requires specific CFM based on dust production rate, port configuration, and capture hood design.
| Tool Type | Size | CFM Range | Dust Volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| Table Saw | 10" Cabinet | 350-450 | Moderate |
| Thickness Planer | 13" | 700-900 | Very High |
| Jointer | 6-8" | 350-450 | High |
| Band Saw | 14" | 300-400 | Low-Moderate |
| Drum Sander | 16-25" | 550-1200 | Very High |
| Router Table | Standard | 200-300 | Low |
| CNC Router | Standard | 600-1000 | High |
Proper ductwork sizing is critical for maintaining adequate air velocity to transport dust particles while minimizing static pressure losses.
| Component | Pressure Loss (in w.c.) | Unit | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Straight Duct (rigid) | 0.10-0.15 | per 10 ft | Low |
| 90 deg Elbow | 0.50-1.50 | each | High |
| 45 deg Elbow | 0.25-0.75 | each | Moderate |
| Blast Gate (open) | 0.15-0.30 | each | Low |
| Flex Hose | 0.30-0.45 | per 10 ft | High |
| Bag Filter (clean) | 1.50-2.50 | total | Moderate |
| Cartridge Filter (clean) | 2.50-3.50 | total | Moderate-High |
| Cyclone Separator | 3.50-5.00 | total | High |
| HEPA Filter | 5.00-7.00 | total | Very High |
Effective dust collection system design balances CFM requirements, ductwork efficiency, static pressure management, and filtration performance.
Cubic Feet per Minute - the volume of air moved through the system. Primary metric for dust collector sizing. Typical hobby shop: 800-1200 CFM. Commercial: 2000-5000 CFM.
Resistance to airflow measured in inches of water column (in w.c.). Total SP = sum of all component losses. Collector must overcome total SP to deliver rated CFM.
Feet Per Minute - the speed of air in the duct. Minimum 3500-4000 FPM required to transport dust and chips without settling.
Air Changes per Hour - how many times the shop air volume is completely exchanged. Hobby: 6-8 ACH. Production: 10-15 ACH.
A manual or automatic valve in a branch duct that opens/closes airflow to individual tools. Concentrates CFM at the active tool for maximum collection efficiency.
A pre-separator that uses centrifugal force to remove 90-95% of chips and dust before the final filter. Dramatically extends filter life and reduces maintenance.
Use simultaneous tool CFM + ambient air changes. Each tool has specific requirements (table saw 350-450 CFM, planer 700-900 CFM). Add shop volume * ACH / 60 for ambient control. Most home shops need 800-1200 CFM total. Always add 20-30% safety factor.
Main trunk: 6-8" for home shops (600-1900 CFM), 8-12" for commercial. Branch ducts: 4" for tools under 400 CFM, 5-6" for 400-1000 CFM. Maintain 3500-4000 FPM velocity to prevent dust settling.
Most residential collectors handle 6-10" w.c., commercial units 10-15" w.c. Calculate losses for each component, sum them, and add 20-25% margin. Total SP must stay within your blower's rated capacity curve.
Bag filters: economical, 85-90% efficient. Cartridge filters: 95-98%, best for general shops. Cyclone pre-separators: remove bulk material before final filter. HEPA: 99.97% for health-critical applications but requires powerful blower.
Monitor pressure drop across filters. Clean cartridge filters when pressure increases 2-3" above clean baseline. Replace bag filters every 6-12 months depending on usage. Cyclone bins should be emptied when 2/3 full.
Ground all metal ductwork to prevent static buildup. Use spark-resistant materials near sanders. Maintain proper air velocity (3500+ FPM). Follow OSHA PEL limits (5 mg/m3 softwood, 1 mg/m3 hardwood). Dispose of oily rags properly to prevent fire.