Either this guy is paranoid, or ultra sensitive, or onto something that might 
be relevant to everyone including us...



________________________________
From: "martsmai...@aol.com" <martsmai...@aol.com>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, January 24, 2010 11:02:44 PM
Subject: CS>Off Topic Mold answers from Mike Part Two

Another thing  I have found that is very important is  
to   clean all
the lint  and  dirt from your living 
area.  Look  under  the  bed and
clean the dust 
bunnies  each day. Get a moist sponge and run it along
the window 
ledges.  Clean your desk each day and any counter  or 
flat
surface  where lint can gather. Vacuum the entire area daily.  
If you
live in  a house with a carpet, move. You need to find  
a   new place
with a  hardwood  or low voc tile floor 
that  has  a  sealed basement
that doesn't grow mold. This 
is  not easy to find.

Mold grows  on  the lint and 
fills  the environment  with  spores. If
your body  
uses  all its resources to fight the mold when you  are 
at
home,  there is very little left to handle the spores in the 
car.

It  is  important  to  realize the biggest 
source  of   spores  is the
bedding you  use each 
night. Mold grows  in the cotton  and polyester
fibres, and you 
breath the  spores in for eight hours. Then your body
has to spend the 
rest of  the day trying to get rid of them.

I have  tried 
many  different ways of killing the spores  in bedding.
They  
do  not  work.  The spores are  invulnerable   
to  any household
chemical or  processing temperature  you 
can  use  without destroying
the  fabric.

About 
the  only thing I have found that partially  works  is  to 
wash
the bedding  each day using a  cup of fresh bleach in the 
tub  at the
start of  the  wash cycle. Use the minimum amount 
of  soap  that will
still make  a few bubbles. I use about a 
teaspoon in my  Kenmore  HE3
front loader. The reason for using an 
extremely small amount  of soap 
is
to  minimize  the  
lint    generated   in  the  fabric.  This 
goes
everywhere and soon starts growing mold.

I am  working 
on  a machine using ozone to kill the  spores.  This 
is
normally a  serious problem since ozone generators do not  
work  when
the humidity  is  high or in high room  
temperatures. But  I  think I
have found  a   
solution to the problem and will let you  know  if it
works as well 
as I think it will.

Finally, you can mount a  high efficiency 
furnace filter on  the back 
of
a 20 inch box  fan and turn the 
fan on low speed.

The filter  will   slow  the  
airflow down  to  the  point  where  the
propeller 
ceases  to  function as an airfoil. But it  will  act  
as a
paddle and  spray air out the sides  of the case. This  
is sufficient
for a bit of new air to  enter the filter.

The 
problem  is the filter doesn't do a  good job on the  tiny 
spores
that cause  the greatest  problems. I bought two of  
the professional
version of   the  Dylos  Air Quality 
Monitors  to  monitor  the  spore
count.

I 
have  tried  a number of  different vendor's filters,  
and  most of
them  simply  do not work. The best I found was 
the 3M  Filtret  9500.
This costs  around $30.00, but the 
Dylos shows only  gets  about half
the spores.  So  you 
need to use  it in a closed  room  where  it 
can
recirculate the  air and get a few more spores on each 
pass.

The next problem  is the filter doesn't last very long. 
It  starts to
pick  up  lint  from the air which collects 
on  the   filter.  Soon it
starts growing  mold. 
Now, instead of  filtering the spores  from the
air, it  
becomes  a  spore generator. After a few days,  you  have 
to
discard  the filter and buy a new one. This gets very 
expensive.

I  have  tried  a  number   
of    ways   of  filtering  the  air 
using
electrostatic fields from dual polarity high voltage generators.  
The
high voltage  causes  a  few major  problems.  
Dirt  collects  in the
housing and  causes the system to arc 
over. The negative HV generator 
is
not  designed to handle arcovers, 
and it is quickly destroyed.

The  next  problem  is 
humidity. When it is  hot  and   humid outside,
moisture 
collects  on  the housing and  causes  severe  problems 
with
arcover.

I  may have found a solution to this problem and I 
am in  the  process
of building a system to try it. I will let you 
know if it  works.

Regards,

Mike

P.S. This  
information may be of interest to  others in the  list. If 
it
is OK with you, would you mind  posting this reply to the  
group?