Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Ron
 
Posts: n/a
Default Poplar dust

I've heard about all the exotic woods and the irritations their dust
can cause but has anyone had a problem with poplar dust? I was working
in the shop all weekend long (all day for 3 days straight). I was
making some prototypes out of poplar and now I seem to be developing a
bad cough, chest irritations and a sore throat. I may have to go to
the Dr. soon to get it checked out. At first I thought it was just
irritation fromt he dust but I've used it before and haven't had a
problem.
  #2   Report Post  
Charlie Self
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Ron Short asks:

I've heard about all the exotic woods and the irritations their dust
can cause but has anyone had a problem with poplar dust? I was working
in the shop all weekend long (all day for 3 days straight). I was
making some prototypes out of poplar and now I seem to be developing a
bad cough, chest irritations and a sore throat. I may have to go to
the Dr. soon to get it checked out. At first I thought it was just
irritation fromt he dust but I've used it before and haven't had a
problem.


Almost any wood can cause throat and nose lining and eye irritations, given
enough exposure. You say you've used it befo have you used it this
extensively before? What other conditions in your shop may have changed? In
your health--are you taking medication and if so what kind? Have you had a
recent bee sting or insect bite?

You've just run up on the real reason for either using a dust collector or
wearing a dust mask when working with even the mildest woods.

But, then, you may also just be coming down with a cold.

Good luck in clearing up whatever it is.

Charlie Self
"Men stumble over the truth from time to time, but most pick themselves up and
hurry off as if nothing happened." Sir Winston Churchill
  #3   Report Post  
Leon
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I have used Poplar for years and the only thing bad about it to me is the
yucky sweet smell. You may simply be getting sick and the dust is being an
irritant.


"Ron" wrote in message
om...
I've heard about all the exotic woods and the irritations their dust
can cause but has anyone had a problem with poplar dust? I was working
in the shop all weekend long (all day for 3 days straight). I was
making some prototypes out of poplar and now I seem to be developing a
bad cough, chest irritations and a sore throat. I may have to go to
the Dr. soon to get it checked out. At first I thought it was just
irritation fromt he dust but I've used it before and haven't had a
problem.



  #4   Report Post  
TeamCasa
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Ron, I have worked with poplar quite a bit lately and have found that when
machining or sanding, I need to wear a dust mask.
I am not a doctor, medical advice from me would be like asking for Charlie
Self's advice on building an airport.
Dave



"Ron" wrote in message
om...
I've heard about all the exotic woods and the irritations their dust
can cause but has anyone had a problem with poplar dust? I was working
in the shop all weekend long (all day for 3 days straight). I was
making some prototypes out of poplar and now I seem to be developing a
bad cough, chest irritations and a sore throat. I may have to go to
the Dr. soon to get it checked out. At first I thought it was just
irritation fromt he dust but I've used it before and haven't had a
problem.



  #5   Report Post  
Rumpty
 
Posts: n/a
Default

No one should work in the wood shop without at least a nuisance dust mask
on. If you are into heavy sanding operations a two strap mask is suggested.

--

Rumpty

Radial Arm Saw Forum: http://forums.delphiforums.com/woodbutcher/start

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


"Ron" wrote in message
om...
I've heard about all the exotic woods and the irritations their dust
can cause but has anyone had a problem with poplar dust? I was working
in the shop all weekend long (all day for 3 days straight). I was
making some prototypes out of poplar and now I seem to be developing a
bad cough, chest irritations and a sore throat. I may have to go to
the Dr. soon to get it checked out. At first I thought it was just
irritation fromt he dust but I've used it before and haven't had a
problem.





  #6   Report Post  
patrick conroy
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Ron" wrote in message
om...

the Dr. soon to get it checked out. At first I thought it was just
irritation fromt he dust but I've used it before and haven't had a
problem.


What precautions do you have in place? What do you have for a DC, Air
Cleaner and Dust Mask?


  #7   Report Post  
Swingman
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Ron" wrote in message
I've heard about all the exotic woods and the irritations their dust
can cause but has anyone had a problem with poplar dust? I was working
in the shop all weekend long (all day for 3 days straight). I was
making some prototypes out of poplar and now I seem to be developing a
bad cough, chest irritations and a sore throat. I may have to go to
the Dr. soon to get it checked out. At first I thought it was just
irritation fromt he dust but I've used it before and haven't had a
problem.


I am now heartily subscribing to the theory that you eventually reach an age
where you become much more susceptible to airborne dust particles of any
type.

I had a similar experience last year, which I was ready to attribute to
walnut dust. While you may never know the exact reason, it is probably
safest to assume that "dust", regardless of source, is the reason for your
symptoms and you should take some type of appropriate action, starting with
a trip to the doctor before it gets worse.

I cleaned out the shop last Saturday with a leaf blower and, although I wore
a mask (my goatee makes a good seal impossible), shortly afterwards I begin
to notice the same feeling in my lungs that I got last year.

.... needless to say that twice warned, I am now on a dust
collection/reduction crusade before I begin any new projects. You might want
to consider the same.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 7/10/04


  #8   Report Post  
Australopithecus scobis
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Wed, 08 Sep 2004 06:27:28 -0700, Ron wrote:

I seem to be developing a
bad cough, chest irritations and a sore throat. I may have to go to
the Dr. soon to get it checked out.


Others have handled the dust mask angle. Just a warning--there have been
lots of nasty upper respiratory bugs running around my area, maybe yours
too. Last month I spent a couple of days in the hospital with pneumonia.
It got so bad because I thought the early stages were "just sawdust".


--
"Keep your ass behind you"

  #9   Report Post  
Puff Griffis
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Same thing happens to me with poplar so I just started using a dust mask =
when I work with it. Solved the problem.
Puff

"Ron" wrote in message =
om...
I've heard about all the exotic woods and the irritations their dust
can cause but has anyone had a problem with poplar dust? I was working
in the shop all weekend long (all day for 3 days straight). I was
making some prototypes out of poplar and now I seem to be developing a
bad cough, chest irritations and a sore throat. I may have to go to
the Dr. soon to get it checked out. At first I thought it was just
irritation fromt he dust but I've used it before and haven't had a
problem.


  #10   Report Post  
Charlie Self
 
Posts: n/a
Default

TeamCasa responds:

I am not a doctor, medical advice from me would be like asking for Charlie
Self's advice on building an airport.


Planes at one end, tower in the middle, ambulances at the other end.

Charlie Self
"Men stumble over the truth from time to time, but most pick themselves up and
hurry off as if nothing happened." Sir Winston Churchill


  #11   Report Post  
Jay Pique
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Wed, 8 Sep 2004 08:06:03 -0700, "TeamCasa"
wrote:

Ron, I have worked with poplar quite a bit lately and have found that when
machining or sanding, I need to wear a dust mask.
I am not a doctor, medical advice from me would be like asking for Charlie
Self's advice on building an airport.


I've got a buddy that designs or builds airports for a living, and
believe me - based on Charlie's writing ability I'd *much* rather him
than he be designing the airports of tomorrow.

JP
****************
It needs to be STRAIGHT?!
  #12   Report Post  
RonB
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I have never heard of or experinced a problem with poplar. You could be
coming down with the crud, or you might have a specific allergy to the dust.

If it is allergy, it might be cause for concern - some folks can have severe
reactions.

If it is the crud, try whisky and chili.




  #13   Report Post  
Ron
 
Posts: n/a
Default

To answer some questions and give more info.

I've used poplar quite a bit, that's why I was surprised to be
irritated like this. I have a 16x20 basement shop with one window a
dust collector and a Jet air filter system. The problem is that I had
the window closed and the air filter wasn't running. No mask either.
In retrospect I guess I should run the air filter whenever I'm inthe
shop and I think in the future I will. Before I finished the shop off
I didn't have enough power to run all the tools at once so I just ran
the filter when it got real dusty. I guess I'll have to change that
habbit.

And my wife reminded me that the kids had a bad cough a few weeks ago
and maybe I'm just getting that. Of course the dust hasn't helped but
I haven't been in the shop in a few days and it hasn't gotten better
so probably not related.

(Ron) wrote in message . com...
I've heard about all the exotic woods and the irritations their dust
can cause but has anyone had a problem with poplar dust? I was working
in the shop all weekend long (all day for 3 days straight). I was
making some prototypes out of poplar and now I seem to be developing a
bad cough, chest irritations and a sore throat. I may have to go to
the Dr. soon to get it checked out. At first I thought it was just
irritation fromt he dust but I've used it before and haven't had a
problem.

  #14   Report Post  
patrick conroy
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Charlie Self" wrote in message
...

Planes at one end, tower in the middle, ambulances at the other end.


Notsofast! I'm writing this down!!

Planes at one end.
Tower in the middle...


  #15   Report Post  
patrick conroy
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Swingman" wrote in message
...


I am now heartily subscribing to the theory that you eventually reach an

age
where you become much more susceptible to airborne dust particles of any
type.


Mine is that it is a cumulative effect. Arithmetic, geometric or exponential
curve, I have no idea. But I'm betting it is additive.

So I've made a committment to wear my 3M half-mask respiratory ALL of the
time.
Like braces or single-malt scotch, it takes awhile to get used to, but the
payoff in the end is worth it.




  #16   Report Post  
Swingman
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"patrick conroy" wrote in message

"Swingman" wrote in message


I am now heartily subscribing to the theory that you eventually reach an

age
where you become much more susceptible to airborne dust particles of any
type.


Mine is that it is a cumulative effect. Arithmetic, geometric or

exponential
curve, I have no idea. But I'm betting it is additive.


I agree ... I just got another real-world example of the lack of youthful
lungs when I was fairly close to a big tanker explosion on the freeway a
couple of days ago. My initial instinct to rush to the aid of someone close
to the inferno was quickly squelched by the fact that I could no longer
breath from the smoke and fumes by the time I got halfway there ... rather
than being the subject of a rescue, instead of a rescuer, I backed off when
I saw there were other's obviously faring better in the smoke than I was.

Another humbling lesson in the mind aging slower than the body ....

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 7/10/04


  #17   Report Post  
patrick conroy
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Swingman" wrote in message
news
Another humbling lesson in the mind aging slower than the body ....


That - and ear hair...
I hate ear hair...


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Triton Respirator Tim Schubach Woodturning 23 August 18th 04 06:15 AM
Dust Collectors: A killer health hazard! Clarke Echols Woodworking 14 March 24th 04 03:26 AM
Recommend Ducting For JET 1.5 HP Canister Dust Collector Jay Chan Woodworking 2 March 12th 04 08:22 PM
dust control on Jet 14" bandsaw SamTheCat Woodworking 4 March 2nd 04 10:32 AM
Dust Collection Bob Davis Woodworking 13 January 3rd 04 10:38 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:16 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"