What is the best air purifier for pet hair?

by admin on July 28, 2010

What is the best air purifier for pet hair?

what is the air purifier with the best quality, you can use?

Hello, I need help finding a purifier good air works very well and my main concern is giving me a good use of animal hair / dander and odors. im having a baby and the cats I have and I would buy one that is cheap. but there are so many options and I do not know what works best. Thank you in advance for your answer :-)

The best air purifier on the market is the Sun Pure SP-20C in http://www.allergy-relief-air-purifier.com/portable-air-purifiers.html This is the same unit used in hospitals and laboratories for its effectiveness and efficiency. Here is one that is used in a laboratory IVF http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sDDX_XWAcRY air purifier that is about IQ Air GC and compared the two machines here http://www.allergy-relief- air-purifier.com/best-home-air-purifier.html The Sun Pure SP-20C is capable of removing dust, hair, allergens, gases and volatile organic compounds (such as gas from a new carpet.) If you have questions, call the site. The user manual is here to download reports and testing and customer references. Hope this helps.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

tontomanii July 28, 2010 at 4:59 am

I have allergies and the biggest thing for getting stuff out of the air is air movement, moving lots of stuff although the filter. Unfortunately that means a big fan and it’s not going to be quiet (although it does have a quiet setting). I always cringe on those whisper quiet ionized air cleaners.

I use a honeywell hepa air filter. Comes in all different sizes. Catches big stuff and small stuff. When I change the outside charcoal filter, it looks like the lint trap from a dryer. Think it’s one of the few recommended by American Lung Association or was when I got it. Rule of thumb is it have to filter all the room air 10 times per hour.

Won’t replaces a vacuum routine though. As you know once hair has landed anywhere it tends to stick. But certainly sucks up airborne stuff and the air current it makes helps circulates airborne until it’s picked up.

Example
http://www.allergytech.com/honeywell_50150.htm

BTW, if you have forced air heating in the house, you should have a filter there. And brush your cats every morning if you can (if they let you ;) ). Get as much loose hair off before it’s airborne.

duggitdy July 28, 2010 at 4:59 am

Vacuum and dust , vacumm and dust, vacuum and dust,. Everything , furniture , curtains , rugs, walls , heater vents.Or get rid of the cats if alergies are real bad. You might also want to try Frebreeze Allergen.

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