Custom Manufacturing Industry podcast is an entrepreneurship and motivational podcast on all platforms, hosted by Aaron Clippinger. Being CEO of multiple companies including the signage industry and the software industry, Aaron has over 20 years of consulting and business management. His software has grown internationally and with over a billion dollars annually going through the software. Using his Accounting degree, Aaron will be talking about his organizational ways to get things done. Hi ...
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Do Air Purifiers Eliminate Mold? | What Do The Filter Ratings Mean For Mold Spores? | Mold Firm
Manage episode 190111533 series 1379931
Sisällön tarjoaa Mold Firm. Mold Firm tai sen podcast-alustan kumppani lataa ja toimittaa kaiken podcast-sisällön, mukaan lukien jaksot, grafiikat ja podcast-kuvaukset. Jos uskot jonkun käyttävän tekijänoikeudella suojattua teostasi ilman lupaasi, voit seurata tässä https://fi.player.fm/legal kuvattua prosessia.
Carson Jeffries: Good morning, I'm Carson Jeffries with the Mold Firm and I'm here today with long-time friend and owner of Air Allergen & Mold Testing. Richard Johnson: My name is Richard Johnson and I'm the President/CEO of Air Allergen & Mold Testing. Well the best thing is a good filter in the HVAC system. They have ratings on filters that can describe how small of a particulate it can capture and including mold spores, because mold spores are basically a particulate. A filter with the equivalent of a MERV8 rating will capture a particulate down as small as 3 microns. Now, most mold spores are 3 microns or higher, aspergillus, penicillium for instance are in the 3.3 micron range, stachybotrys is around 5 microns. So if you have at least a MERV8 filter in your furnace, you're going to be reducing the amount of mold spores that are in the air. It's not going to eliminate them, but it'll be healthier. If you're looking for the background particulate due to the deterioration of the indoor environment, there we recommend at least a MERV10 filter because that'll go down to 1 micron. And that will help filter out some of the background particulate as well. The problem that we see in Atlanta, there are no regulations on what kind of filters that the HVAC system should have, as a result, the vast majority of all of the places that we go into where they're having respiratory problems have these fiberglassy, see-through filters that are statistically equivalent to no filter at all when it comes to helping the indoor air quality. And it's particularly true in apartment buildings where we see that the filters are useless in terms of filtering any of these kinds of materials out of the air. Carson Jeffries: Some things tenants and homeowners can do, or landlords, to reduce the probability for unhealthy particulates or mold would include: better filtration, proper maintenance of HVAC units, and elimination of excess moisture such as leaks, pipe bursts, things of that nature. Richard Johnson: Absolutely, water is not your friend in the built environment. If you have any kind of a situation where you have some real high humidity or causing that kind of thing in the indoor environment, you have a serious problem. And it doesn't have to be directly in the indoor environment if it's a home for instance, that has a crawl space, the crawl space is not conditioned or filtered and all that kind of thing, so you have a perfect environment for a lot of mold growth. And then a lot of these places have the furnace in the crawl space and if the furnace is not well sealed, to completely isolate the air from the crawl space from the home, what happens is you have this breeding ground for mold and that kind of stuff gets drawn into the HVAC system and then broadcast out through the entire home.
…
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43 jaksoa
Manage episode 190111533 series 1379931
Sisällön tarjoaa Mold Firm. Mold Firm tai sen podcast-alustan kumppani lataa ja toimittaa kaiken podcast-sisällön, mukaan lukien jaksot, grafiikat ja podcast-kuvaukset. Jos uskot jonkun käyttävän tekijänoikeudella suojattua teostasi ilman lupaasi, voit seurata tässä https://fi.player.fm/legal kuvattua prosessia.
Carson Jeffries: Good morning, I'm Carson Jeffries with the Mold Firm and I'm here today with long-time friend and owner of Air Allergen & Mold Testing. Richard Johnson: My name is Richard Johnson and I'm the President/CEO of Air Allergen & Mold Testing. Well the best thing is a good filter in the HVAC system. They have ratings on filters that can describe how small of a particulate it can capture and including mold spores, because mold spores are basically a particulate. A filter with the equivalent of a MERV8 rating will capture a particulate down as small as 3 microns. Now, most mold spores are 3 microns or higher, aspergillus, penicillium for instance are in the 3.3 micron range, stachybotrys is around 5 microns. So if you have at least a MERV8 filter in your furnace, you're going to be reducing the amount of mold spores that are in the air. It's not going to eliminate them, but it'll be healthier. If you're looking for the background particulate due to the deterioration of the indoor environment, there we recommend at least a MERV10 filter because that'll go down to 1 micron. And that will help filter out some of the background particulate as well. The problem that we see in Atlanta, there are no regulations on what kind of filters that the HVAC system should have, as a result, the vast majority of all of the places that we go into where they're having respiratory problems have these fiberglassy, see-through filters that are statistically equivalent to no filter at all when it comes to helping the indoor air quality. And it's particularly true in apartment buildings where we see that the filters are useless in terms of filtering any of these kinds of materials out of the air. Carson Jeffries: Some things tenants and homeowners can do, or landlords, to reduce the probability for unhealthy particulates or mold would include: better filtration, proper maintenance of HVAC units, and elimination of excess moisture such as leaks, pipe bursts, things of that nature. Richard Johnson: Absolutely, water is not your friend in the built environment. If you have any kind of a situation where you have some real high humidity or causing that kind of thing in the indoor environment, you have a serious problem. And it doesn't have to be directly in the indoor environment if it's a home for instance, that has a crawl space, the crawl space is not conditioned or filtered and all that kind of thing, so you have a perfect environment for a lot of mold growth. And then a lot of these places have the furnace in the crawl space and if the furnace is not well sealed, to completely isolate the air from the crawl space from the home, what happens is you have this breeding ground for mold and that kind of stuff gets drawn into the HVAC system and then broadcast out through the entire home.
…
continue reading
43 jaksoa
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