Guest guest Posted October 6, 2006 Report Share Posted October 6, 2006 , do you know why window >a/c's have mold problem but dehumidifiers do not? > Barb, Mine did. At least I believe it to have been a big problem. I did not run it that often because it was to hot and I did not want the ac and dehumidifier going at once. But one occasion after being away for a week and having it run full bore set at 35%, and having not been cleaned for a week, I came back and left it running and got sick right away. There are so many variables so the reliability of my suspicion it was the dehumidifier is not absolute but an air condition/humidifier type of high is pretty hard to mistake when they are dirty. They make me profoundly ill, I sleep like a corpse and can't get out of bed to do the simplest chores. I am pretty confident that the mold was in the aluminum cooling fins of the evaporator coils. Although it was not visible as it never was on my ac coils cause I cleaned them every day. Wall/window unit's splash condensate everywhere and the entire bottom of the unit's are covered with dampness and water, so you have a much larger area for breeding mold. Humidifiers on the other hand only drip the condensate into a small easy to clean tray which collects the condensate and drops it into a container so you need only clean the evaporation coils, the drip tray and the collection container. I have been staying inside of the house here in NC and running the dehumidifier in my trailer until I decide what I want to do with it. But because I don't stay inside of it and there are no pets in there I spray the coils with a ten percent bleach solution and don't rinse the coils off since I am not inside to breath the bleach fumes. I would suggest you do the same with all of your equipment while your house is unoccupied. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 7, 2006 Report Share Posted October 7, 2006 and Barb, Microbial growth (mold, yeast and bacteria) definitely occurs on dehumidifiers. Without exception, wherever there is dust and moisture, there will be microbial activity. I have seen dozens of contaminated dehumidifiers. The worst ones are in basements where people cut wood. If dehumidifiers had decent filters, there would be less of a problem. So cleaning the cooling coil (and bucket) is a good idea. Perhaps there is less obvious growth on dehumidifiers because the dust load in basements is less than upstairs. Also, the water drains down into a bucket rather than collecting in a trough directly below the cooling coil. C. May, M.A., CIAQP May Indoor Air Investigations LLC 1522 Cambridge Street Cambridge, MA 02139 617-354-1055 www.mayindoorair.com www.myhouseiskillingme.com >Re: Air condtioners / JEFFREY MAY >Posted by: " Christ " antares41_41@... antares40_40 >Date: Fri Oct 6, 2006 9:08 am (PDT) >>, do you know why window >>a/c's have mold problem but dehumidifiers do not? > >Barb, >Mine did. At least I believe it to have been a big problem. I did >not run it that often because it was to hot and I did not want the ac >and dehumidifier going at once. But one occasion after being away for Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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