I have an attic fan in my shop for summer cooling. I'm sure you know how they work, drawing a vacuum in the room and exhausting into the attic and on outside. I can't run it all the time in the winter, of course, but I can bump it on for 30 seconds and clear the shop of all smoke (after cracking a window open). The heat goes out with the smoke, but my shop furnace burns wood, and it recovers quick and cheap. I don't weld right under it, so in the summer it works nice to leave it on and it pulls the fumes away. Winter, not so nice to leave it on, ha. Shop is small, about 30 feet X 30 feet.
Any time you pull a vacuum inside a building, there's danger of pulling fumes back down your chimney. A wood furnace will let you know quickly that you need to crack a window open, but I'm not sure you'd notice a problem with a gas furnace as quick. That being said, a fresh air intake designed to work with your exhaust would be necessary if your shop is tight.
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Today's Featured Article - George's Fordson Major - by Anthony West (UK). This is a bit of a technical info to add on to the article about George's Major in the "A Towny Goes Plowing" article. George bought his Major from a an implement sale about 18 years ago for £200.00. There is no known history regarding its origins or what service it had done, but the following work was undertaken by Harold alone to bring it up to show standard. From the engine number, it was found that the major was produced late 19
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