Re: Remove air filter, feel better
Posted: Wed Mar 01, 2017 8:58 pm
Imagine how dreadful if Jim were SERIOUS,
what makes you think he's not???chunkyfrog wrote:Imagine how dreadful if Jim were SERIOUS,
Looks terrifying,palerider wrote:has your machine been making a lot of noise?papzombie wrote:And it feels just great without filter: this morning I have enough energy to finish already 9 items in my 12 todo items today, after 100 minutes.
Normally, I would need 8 hours to finish only half of the items.
ever look inside a computer that's been running for a while?
Exactly what do you hope to prove?papzombie wrote:I understand the concern of all members here, but forgive me to want to try something new, for 1-2 weeks. After that I'll have data to analyze when I come back to using the black filter.
No, but I think 2 weeks without filter under a humid weather and air quality of around 40 does not harm my machine too much.Guest wrote:Exactly what do you hope to prove?papzombie wrote:I understand the concern of all members here, but forgive me to want to try something new, for 1-2 weeks. After that I'll have data to analyze when I come back to using the black filter.
Will you have another cpap to use?
papzombie wrote:Looks terrifying,palerider wrote:has your machine been making a lot of noise?papzombie wrote:And it feels just great without filter: this morning I have enough energy to finish already 9 items in my 12 todo items today, after 100 minutes.
Normally, I would need 8 hours to finish only half of the items.
ever look inside a computer that's been running for a while?
My machine makes more noise than 10 months ago, but probably due to the some accidents: 3 times falling from 80cm.
I understand the concern of all members here, but forgive me to want to try something new, for 1-2 weeks. After that I'll have data to analyze when I come back to using the black filter.
and, just how do you know this to be right and true? are you conducting surveillance? are you with the cpap police?jamess101 wrote:this is indeed right. I agree.Guest wrote:fwiw - I routinely replace my filters once a month use the 1st day of the month as a reminder.
crestifer wrote:I appreciate the advice of folks in the big leagues.
The filter is for the air intake provided for therapy, it is not intended for the internal working parts of the machine. The posted picture is ridiculous, you may have been joking, its hard to tell.palerider wrote:
unless the air in your room is highly filtered, all you're doing is harming your machine by running it without a filter.
ever look inside a computer that's been running for a while?
that's what you're turning your cpap into.
you clearly know nothing of the interior workings of a cpap machine, have you ever taken one apart? I have taken apart several.. wrote:The filter is for the air intake provided for therapy, it is not intended for the internal working parts of the machine. The posted picture is ridiculous, you may have been joking, its hard to tell.palerider wrote:
unless the air in your room is highly filtered, all you're doing is harming your machine by running it without a filter.
ever look inside a computer that's been running for a while?
that's what you're turning your cpap into.
palerider wrote: you clearly know nothing of the interior workings of a cpap machine, have you ever taken one apart? I have taken apart several.
it might surprise you to learn that there is a *FAN* inside that little box, and if that fan, like any fan, is exposed to a flow of unfiltered room air for too long, then DUST will start to collect on the fan blades, just like it has on the fan blades and other structures inside that computer, pictured.
everyone else who's posted realizes that the coarse filter on the cpap intake is there primarily to keep dust out of the inner workings of the machine.... what's your mental defect preventing you from understanding this simple principle?
On the picture, I have seen computers that looked almost identical to that after running for a year or two without cleaning. Even in lab/raised floor environments with air filtering you see dust accumulation (not to the this level of course). Machines in homes can get this dirty quite easily.Uncle_Bob wrote:The filter is for the air intake provided for therapy, it is not intended for the internal working parts of the machine. The posted picture is ridiculous, you may have been joking, its hard to tell.palerider wrote:
unless the air in your room is highly filtered, all you're doing is harming your machine by running it without a filter.
ever look inside a computer that's been running for a while?
that's what you're turning your cpap into.
Do you want me to clean it up or leave it?jamess101 wrote:this is indeed right. I agree.
Probably not. Sorry.papzombie wrote:Probably Pugsy wants to comment on this.