There's been a lot of discussion lately about dust control, and I have a question somewhat related to that. In my new building (which is stand-alone and will be insulated), I'm going to need to have some sort of heating and air conditioning--either window a/c units and space heaters or an installed system.
Initially I'd planned to use window units for the first year, just to see how much I needed, and then--if needed--put in an HVAC. However, for a couple reasons, I'm now thinking it might be smarter to install an HVAC system right from the start. I don't have any insulation or wallboard in place yet (or even any electric), so it'd be comparatively easy to install something now rather than later. Plus, if I do window units, I'd have to install double-hung windows. That had been my plan initially, but I'm now thinking that I may just build casement windows rather than double-hung. The window openings are relatively small (so as not to take up too much wall space, and also because small windows look more architecturally appropriate in a traditional barn), and double-hung windows would be overkill. The only advantage of double-hung is that I could use a window a/c, yet if I do that, I'm sacrificing natural light. (Yes, I should have built bigger window openings, architecture be ****ed!)
So, assuming I go with HVAC from the start: do y'all just use regular home HVAC systems, or is there something that's specific for woodshops? I don't want to spend $1500 on an HVAC setup, then kill the thing because of dust. I'll get a DCS eventually, but even with a good DCS, I assume there's still enough dust floating around in a workshop that it'd quickly clog a traditional home HVAC system. Or am I wrong about that?
I'll talk to an HVAC crew abbout this, too, of course, but I'd like to know what's standard among woodworkers before I talk with a sales guy who might want to sell me more than I need. Is there somehting specific I should be asking for?
Brent
Initially I'd planned to use window units for the first year, just to see how much I needed, and then--if needed--put in an HVAC. However, for a couple reasons, I'm now thinking it might be smarter to install an HVAC system right from the start. I don't have any insulation or wallboard in place yet (or even any electric), so it'd be comparatively easy to install something now rather than later. Plus, if I do window units, I'd have to install double-hung windows. That had been my plan initially, but I'm now thinking that I may just build casement windows rather than double-hung. The window openings are relatively small (so as not to take up too much wall space, and also because small windows look more architecturally appropriate in a traditional barn), and double-hung windows would be overkill. The only advantage of double-hung is that I could use a window a/c, yet if I do that, I'm sacrificing natural light. (Yes, I should have built bigger window openings, architecture be ****ed!)
So, assuming I go with HVAC from the start: do y'all just use regular home HVAC systems, or is there something that's specific for woodshops? I don't want to spend $1500 on an HVAC setup, then kill the thing because of dust. I'll get a DCS eventually, but even with a good DCS, I assume there's still enough dust floating around in a workshop that it'd quickly clog a traditional home HVAC system. Or am I wrong about that?
I'll talk to an HVAC crew abbout this, too, of course, but I'd like to know what's standard among woodworkers before I talk with a sales guy who might want to sell me more than I need. Is there somehting specific I should be asking for?
Brent