Diy Air Filter Box Fan

20 inch box fan.
Diy air filter box fan. I used large rubber bands. Some have wondered whether we should tape it onto the back of the box fan filter. These filter fans can filter out the small particles that are common in wildfire or wood smoke. Insofar as filter changing costs you will find that it is still much cheaper to buy furnace filters and variants of them without sacrificing on quality or air cleaning capacity.
This diy air filter is made from a 20 inch box fan plywood and two 20 inch air filters. The filters sell for. One with the box fan and one with the hepa filter. The diy box fan filter was able to drop pm2 5 particulates down 77 the hepa filter dropped the pm10 down 94 46.
This diy air filter for wildfire smoke is less than 20. This set up was done in 2 rooms. This diy air filter for wildfire smoke is less than 20. All you need to do is buy what s called a merv 13 or fpr 10 furnace filter and tape it to the back of a box fan.
20 by 20 by 1 merv 13 furnace filter. Point that in the right direction and then tape onto the front of the box fan filter. Using our lighthouse 3016 iaq laser particle counter air samples were collected for 2 minutes with a 2 min delay. Mine cost 20 at a local home improvement store.
Purchase a standard 20 box fan. There will be a little arrow on the filter showing which way the air should flow. The filters sell for about 15. Securely fasten a merv 13 filter to the air intake side of the fan.
Particle pollution can lead to a number of immediate and long term health impacts such as trouble breathing asthma attacks. Apply gasketing to the edges of the air intake part of the fan. And no box fan is engineered to withstand the extra workload of driving air through a dense filter so we can t claim this won t damage the fan s motor and we wouldn t consider it a long. Diy air filter one easy and affordable way to make your own air cleaner at home is with a box fan and a furnace filter.
To make one start by buying a merv 13 or fpr 10 furnace filter and tape it to the back of a box fan. So anything we can do to remove dust and particulates from the air is a step in the right direction.