That's a shame to hear. I didn't pay a lot for it so it doesn't bother me that much. I'm gonna install mine around July.I'm running one now and it doesn't seem to reduce smells at all. I still get fumigated by old diesel trucks for example.
That's a shame to hear. I didn't pay a lot for it so it doesn't bother me that much. I'm gonna install mine around July.I'm running one now and it doesn't seem to reduce smells at all. I still get fumigated by old diesel trucks for example.
If someone in the car farts and you put the climate control on recirculate, will charcoal make a difference?
We didn't need no CAFs in the past and almost all of us survived.
They can keep their ashtrays too. I grind my cigarettes out in my wife's eye....and she's grateful for it.
We used to climb trees and jumped down and sought to land on our heads, we didn't need no helmets.
Didn't need no nanny state. neither.
Also, ban power steering. It'll take a lot of women off the road.
Let 'em steal my cat. I bypassed it years ago. I have a stockpiles of leaded fuel. leaded paint and asbestos sleepwear for the kids!
Seriously, just keeping the old grouchy ones happy.
The Purolator Boss (has a carbon layer) is pretty effective but you need to change your cabin filter about every six months or so in my opinion.I'm surprised they're effective for that long but it sounds like they make a difference.
So how could that work? They would have to absorb or adsorb the relevant organic chemicals, then slowly release them at a rate that is imperceptible. Otherwise they would just stop working after a few minutes/hours/days.
I'm not a big fan of hog odours. We visited a communal farm some years ago and they really wanted to show me their hog operation. The smell was so bad I couldn't get through the door. And my down filled jacket was intolerable for months afterwards.
There are luxury cars that not only have a cabin filter, they have air freshener cartridges you're supposed to change out at the stealership as well.I am waiting for Project Farm to conduct this test, in the name of science.
I use carbon where specified by the manufacturer, but the charcoal does seem to lose its effectiveness very quickly based on this and the referenced study
Thin Carbon Filter Layers Lose Effectiveness in Just Minutes, Study Finds – Smart Air
A study on filters with thin activated carbon layers finds efficacy drops in just 5 minutes. 3-in-1 filters are more marketing than science.smartairfilters.com
They seem to recommend a filter that has a separate carbon element, but I am not aware of the existence of any such filter.
I just read my own earlier post and noticed I left out "not." Inserted in bold as it completely changes the meaning. Proof? I have an activated carbon Hengst CAF in there right now. Also, I can't say I have noticed activated carbon CAFs lose their effectiveness in eliminating odors throughout their service life.I have been using activated carbon CAFs for twenty years. I have never noticed them not eliminating or at least reducing odors. I'm talking mostly about being stuck in traffic behind a Diesel. It can get dusty here and who knows what spores grow in the pleats especially during the rainy season? That's why I replace the CAF every spring.