Activated Carbon Furnace Filter

Huel Perkins

Well-Known Member
I know that most people run ozone generators in conjunction with a timer. For example, it can run for 15 minutes every other hour of the day and simply be switched off any time you need to be in the grow room.

The key is to figure out what acceptable levels of ozone are and avoid them, this is the information i have yet to find...
 

stumpjumper

Well-Known Member
Week 6 and my 6" x 4' filter is failing horribly lol. My shit is in the basement and when I wake up in the morning on the second floor I can smell it. I don't get visitors and my house is not close to others so really the mail lady is the only person that might catch a whiff..
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
I build my filters and re-fill. I like that I'm taking the smell OUT of the air and not adding anything to the air I'm breathing. That's just me, not saying that anything else is bad. Just what I do.
 

stumpjumper

Well-Known Member
I build my filters and re-fill. I like that I'm taking the smell OUT of the air and not adding anything to the air I'm breathing. That's just me, not saying that anything else is bad. Just what I do.

You ever heat your used carbon up to re-activate it?
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
I have not, actually. That only partially works unless you can do it in O2 free environment (Pyrolysis) at something like 800F.

Otherwise in an oven with lots of O2, you could heat to pre-combustion, and may be driving off some elements like water or CO2 but not the main stink molecules that the carbon has attracted. MAYBE, because I don't know what temp would effectively drive off the odor molecules. Maybe that happens at a low temp.

If you raise the temp in high O2 oven, you'll burn the carbon to ash.
 

stumpjumper

Well-Known Member
Just wondered because Scentloc clothing has activated carbon in it and it supposedly re-activates it when you put it in the dryer..
 

NickNasty

Well-Known Member
I use to use a ozone generator when I was doing an attic grow, it worked great but people are right when they say it is harmful to plants, animals and people it will also eat away metal over time. It is best to use them on the exhaust if you are exhausting directly outside and even then it it should be exhausting in a place where it can dissipate fast. If you can smell the ozone then it is basically harming you, plants etc. They are a great way to sterilize an area when you are setting up a room though or when you got a room thats empty thats been giving you trouble with bugs/disease.
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
You'd prefer to use carbon that was optimal size for vapor filtration. That would be 4x6 mesh size. Slightly larger than carbon for water filtration. It's what you'd find in commercial filters. Coconut carbon is what you want. Highest Iodine number.

Can be had for $2 a pound in 55 pound orders. Shipping is $1 a pound. that's 2 cu ft.
 

stumpjumper

Well-Known Member
You'd prefer to use carbon that was optimal size for vapor filtration. That would be 4x6 mesh size. Slightly larger than carbon for water filtration. It's what you'd find in commercial filters. Coconut carbon is what you want. Highest Iodine number.

Can be had for $2 a pound in 55 pound orders. Shipping is $1 a pound. that's 2 cu ft.
Seems cheaper to just buy a new filter
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
Well, you can make a few filters from that much carbon. I use metal screen (hardware cloth) and landscape fabric. 12" dia x 20. Top and bottom are 5 gallon pail lids. So maybe $30 worth of carbon per filter? Maybe? Dunno
 

stumpjumper

Well-Known Member
Well, you can make a few filters from that much carbon. I use metal screen (hardware cloth) and landscape fabric. 12" dia x 20. Top and bottom are 5 gallon pail lids. So maybe $30 worth of carbon per filter? Maybe? Dunno
Yeah I use bigger filters than that though.
 
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