I don't get where you say, "I decided to diverge from the standard design by a) pulling the air through the filter rather than
pushing it through which would result in less turbulence on the filter and b) having a bottom with a regular grid of holes so that
the air flow is more even - again less turbulence." Neither seems true to me, and there are few drawings.
"I decided to diverge from the standard design by a) pulling the air through the filter"
What does that really get you? Which filter? The one in the top of the diagram just below and left of your photo? One in
some other diagram?
The one if the middle of that diagram is also shown pushing through a filter. To me, pushing through a filter keeps all the dust
tenuously held on the helper fan vanes from getting through when it comes loose. Pulling makes for low quality of non-clean air
to my thinking processes.
"would result in less turbulence on the filter" I see many ways to design such that there is low turbulence on the filter.
The first way is to allow more space between. Another way is use baffles to guide air flows.
"having a bottom with a regular grid of holes so that the air flow is more even"
More even than what? There is only one diagram I find in
To me, having holes for return separated from the source of air by a cross section of the hood that is unchanging
is normal for creating laminar flow.
"The socket was attached to the back panel with a foam insert to prevent air leaking through the whole socket assembly."
I would allow some air flow to keep dust in the electrical box in the box by the negative pressure behind it.
Step 8 answers some questions. You show fans with no filter between them and the clean area. That is going to be subpar
for calling this a safety cabinet. To keep people from feeling overconfident while using your design with pathogens,
I would change the name to laminar flow cabinet. Biosafety cabinets have two filters and negative pressure in the hood
clean area compared to the room. Step 8 diagram says that your clean air flows out at the user through the access window opening.
A biosafety cabinet has keeping anything from getting out the openings
as its main goal, and being a good source of clean air inside in a zone is its secondary goal. So yours is not a biosafety cabinet.
Step 12 needs a listed electric box where the IEC socket connections to the solid wire are shown.
I like the use of plywood and super paint. That can be a real cost saver for a DIY hood compared to plastic.
You really should relabel this as a laminar flow hood or cabinet to be accurate.
John Griessen