Mist Cannon Dust Suppression Cannon Fog Cannon Sprayer Dust Control Equipment for Construction

This is a dust suppression cannon for the guy who's tired of neighbors calling about the cloud blowing across the road. Quarries, demolition sites, transfer stations, heavy construction—any place where moving material means moving dust. This machine puts a curtain of water between your work and everything around it.


The design is simple and it works. A big fan, a ring of nozzles, and a pump that pushes water at the right pressure. Air moves the mist. Water grabs the dust. The two meet, the dust gets heavy, and it falls where it belongs—on your site, not on the cars parked down the street.


The fan housing is welded steel, not stamped. The blades are balanced and pitched for distance, not just spread. You get a column of air that stays tight for a hundred feet before it starts to fan out. That reach matters when you're working a big face or trying to keep dust contained across a wide area.


The nozzle ring is brass, machined, and easy to clean when it needs it. No tiny orifices that clog with a speck of sand. The pump is a simple centrifugal unit—nothing complicated, nothing that needs a specialist to fix. Strainers before the pump and after, so debris gets caught before it reaches the fine stuff.


Controls are basic. Toggle switches or a small handheld remote, depending on the setup. Oscillation speed is adjustable. Tilt angle is electric over hydraulic. You set it to sweep a zone automatically or point it at one spot and let it hammer. Flow rate adjusts so you're not soaking the ground unless you want to.


Product Details

1.Shoots a Stream That Carries

The fan design pushes air hard and straight. You set it up at the edge of a demo site and it reaches the far corner where dust kicks up. The mist doesn't fall twenty feet out—it travels, finds the dust, and knocks it down before it leaves the property line.


2.Nozzles That Don't Plug Up

The water ring uses bigger orifices than most systems, and the strainer catches junk before it hits the nozzles. You're not stopping three times a day to poke clogs out with a paperclip. Run it on pond water, hydrant water, or tank water—it keeps spraying.


3.Swings and Tilts From the Ground

A small remote or a simple control box lets you aim it without climbing up on the trailer. Wind shifts, you adjust. Work moves to a different face, you pivot it. You're not walking back and forth cranking handles or wrestling the cannon by hand.


4.Stays Put When the Fan Spools Up

The frame is heavy and the stabilizer jacks dig in. When that big fan hits full speed, the machine doesn't dance around or try to tip. Set it, level it, and walk away. It'll be pointing where you left it when you come back.


5.Built for the Dust It's Fighting

The fan motor is sealed against grit. The pump is protected behind a screen. The control box is weather tight. These things live in the worst possible conditions—blowing dust, construction mud, job site abuse—and they keep running because they were built to handle it.

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