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Cleaning Equipment |
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Understanding Vacuum Cleaner Filtration |
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Did you know?
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A vacuum without a good
filtration system is like using a leaf blower throughout the facility. In
addition, poor filtration causes motor failure, excessive dusting due to dirt
on the horizontal surfaces, and reduced indoor air quality.
With the growing concern for
pollution control, filtration and indoor air quality have become a big issue in
the sanitary maintenance industry. Without good filtration, the unwanted dirt
and dust is simply exhausted back into the air.
Small particles are
generally measured in fractions of a meter, known as microns. One micron equals
one one-millionth of a meter. Particles below 10 microns are invisible to the
human eye. However, the most common airborne particle is 2.4 microns. The most
harmful Respirable Size Particle (RSP) is 0.3 microns. To put this in
perspective, the diameter of the human hair is typically 80 to 100 microns.
A standard HEPA filter must
retain all particles to 0.3 in size at 99.97% efficiency, thus retaining all
harmful allergens. Filtration is measured in terms of airflow waterlift,
particle size, surface area, and graduated filtration.
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Just give me the facts.... |
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Airflow determines how many
particles can be moved into a vacuum cleaner in a given period of time. The
speed at which this happens is called capture velocity. Capture velocity is
the speed of the air rushing into a vacuum cleaner orifice necessary to
overcome gravity, removing dust-laden air from a surface or space in the
process. A capture velocity of 1,000 feet per minute (fpm) is sufficient for
vapors, gases and smoke, but a minimum of 5,000 fpm is necessary for lead dust
with small chips, cement dust and chunks of asbestos pipe insulation.
Waterlift is the term used to describe the process of a
vacuums ability to lift water from a stationary position into the air-stream.
The higher the waterlift rating, the stronger your vacuum motor is which, in
turn, increases the capture velocity.
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Useful information on the Tidy-Vac:
Compared with single motor
upright vacuums, there is significant cost savings in:
- Less down time
- Less damage than an upright vacuum being banged
into furniture and walls. Canister vacuums are less fatiguing for the
user. The user is pushing and pulling more weight with an upright versus
the wand and tool of a canister vacuum.
- The canister is lightweight and easy to handle
with a low of center gravity.
- Ultra quiet operation. Perfect for offices and
hotel environments.
- Standard HEPA-rated three stage filtration.
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The effectiveness of a
vacuum cleaner is also measured in the amount of air the vacuum can displace,
measured in cubic feet per minute (cfm). The higher the cfm rating of a
machine, the more dust-laden air and debris it can remove from a surface. The
amount of air the vacuum can displace is dependent upon the speed and size of
the fans in the motor, which gives a better cfm rating. Filters are designed not to stay clean. The idea for a
superior filter system is for it to capture unwanted particles while still
allowing air to pass through the system. The size of the dust particles that
impact the filter is the most important factor. Filters can be made of many
types of materials, such as woven or non-woven fabrics or micro-permeable
plastic tubes.
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What does all this mean?
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It means when evaluating how
good a filter works, two pieces of information are needed. First you need to
know how small of a particle the filter will capture. As stated previously,
particles are measured in microns. The second piece of information is the
efficiency rating of the filter. This is the percentage of the stated micron
size that the filter will capture. The
Tidy-Vac canister
vacuum outshines all the rest in terms of filtration. It achieves a filtration
rating of 99.99954% at .3 microns and has a triple filtration system. Its
waterlift of 96 inches and its airflow rating of 106 cubic feet per minute make
this vacuum unbeatable the sanitary maintenance field.
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