I’ve noticed that every air purifier I used fails to reduce PM2.5 by much on highly polluted days or cities (for instance, the Aurea grouphouse in Berlin has a Dyson air purifier, but when I ran it to the max, it still barely reduced the Berlin PM2.5 from its value of 15-20 ug/m^3, even at medium distances from Berlin). I live in Boston where PM2.5 levels are usually low enough, and I still don’t notice differences in PM [I use sqair’s] but I run it all the time anyways because it still captures enough dust over the day
Sounds like you use bad air purifiers, or too few, or run them on too low of a setting. I live in a wildfire prone area, and always keep a close eye on the PM2.5 reports for outside air, as well as my indoor air monitor. My air filters do a great job of keeping the air pollution down inside, and doing something like opening a door gives a noticeable brief spike in the PM2.5.
Good results require: fresh filters, somewhat more than the recommended number of air filters per unit of area, running the air filters on max speed (low speeds tend to be disproportionately less effective, giving unintuitively low performance).
Yes, one of the bloggers I follow compared them to the PC fan boxes. They look very expensive, though the CADR/size and noise are fine.
My guess is Dyson’s design is particularly bad. No way to get lots of filter area when most of the purifier is a huge bladeless fan. No idea about the other one, maybe you have air leaking in or an indoor source of PM.
Have you seen smartairfilters.com?
I’ve noticed that every air purifier I used fails to reduce PM2.5 by much on highly polluted days or cities (for instance, the Aurea grouphouse in Berlin has a Dyson air purifier, but when I ran it to the max, it still barely reduced the Berlin PM2.5 from its value of 15-20 ug/m^3, even at medium distances from Berlin). I live in Boston where PM2.5 levels are usually low enough, and I still don’t notice differences in PM [I use sqair’s] but I run it all the time anyways because it still captures enough dust over the day
Sounds like you use bad air purifiers, or too few, or run them on too low of a setting. I live in a wildfire prone area, and always keep a close eye on the PM2.5 reports for outside air, as well as my indoor air monitor. My air filters do a great job of keeping the air pollution down inside, and doing something like opening a door gives a noticeable brief spike in the PM2.5.
Good results require: fresh filters, somewhat more than the recommended number of air filters per unit of area, running the air filters on max speed (low speeds tend to be disproportionately less effective, giving unintuitively low performance).
Yes, one of the bloggers I follow compared them to the PC fan boxes. They look very expensive, though the CADR/size and noise are fine.
My guess is Dyson’s design is particularly bad. No way to get lots of filter area when most of the purifier is a huge bladeless fan. No idea about the other one, maybe you have air leaking in or an indoor source of PM.