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Living Air XL air purifier diagnosis information.

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BillHeronemus

Jan 1, 1970
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This unit came in loaded with tar, nicotene and dead moths inside the unit and
around the flybacks and High voltage area with the complaint of No Ozone
output. I found that there was very little HV at startup - between 260-305 Vpp
at 13,190Hz with the purifier control wide open. The DC voltage on the drain
of the output MOSFET was 36V wide open and 17Vdc with the control fully CCW.
There is a small pot on the HV circuit board for more compensation if needed.
After cleaning the Hi-Low switch and pots, I was able to obtain 4150Vpp on low
and 5750 Vpp on high with good clean waveform on my Sencore SC3100. I cleaned
the ionizing needle as well, and this baby seems good to go. If anyone has had
any other experience on these units or would be interested in becoming a dealer
and selling them, let me know. I'll do what I can to help.

Bill
 
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Bob Shuman

Jan 1, 1970
0
Bill,

I've heard the radio commercials and your posting is helpful in confirming
the operation, but I had some other basic questions:

What is the maximum recommended square footage for these units? Are two
required if the home has dual furnace and central A/C? What is the cost of
the equipment? Cost and difficulty of Installation? Average operating cost
per month?

Bob
 
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Jason

Jan 1, 1970
0
Ran across this posting. I have a newer "Fresh Air" purifier. It does
up to 3000 square feet (based on 8ft ceiling), only one is needed per
home up to 3,000 square feet. My unit cost around $700, but I love it
and would have paid $1000 for it. All I did was take it out of the box
and plug it in, no cost to install, no filters to buy, 10 minutes to
clean per month, and it says it runs only about a quarter ($.25) per
day in electricity (less than $8 per month). I got mine by going to
www.freshairliving.com/rjt and entering "guest" for the password. They
were very helpful and let me evaluate the machine for 10 days on a
security deposit and I didn't have to pay shipping! Tell them Jason I
referred you and give them my email address please.
 
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James Sweet

Jan 1, 1970
0
Jason said:
Ran across this posting. I have a newer "Fresh Air" purifier. It does
up to 3000 square feet (based on 8ft ceiling), only one is needed per
home up to 3,000 square feet. My unit cost around $700, but I love it
and would have paid $1000 for it. All I did was take it out of the box
and plug it in, no cost to install, no filters to buy, 10 minutes to
clean per month, and it says it runs only about a quarter ($.25) per
day in electricity (less than $8 per month). I got mine by going to
www.and entering "guest" for the password. They
were very helpful and let me evaluate the machine for 10 days on a
security deposit and I didn't have to pay shipping! Tell them Jason I
referred you and give them my email address please.

Take your spam elsewhere, only a twit would pay $700 for an air purifier,
you can buy very good filters for an existing forced air heating system and
run the fan all the time if you need good filtration, works better than a
standalone purifier and it's a whole lot cheaper.
 
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