Queens Pawn Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:06

Air filters are designed for exactly this. I have one made by winix. It significantly reduces dust build up. Expect to pay £100-200. There are many others.

larkone Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:06

A cleaner once a weekdata:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7

xxGBHxx Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:06

There's loads of air filters on the market that will do this, I have one in my sons room that filters an ungodly amount of dust out of the air.

I also have a dehumidifier in my utility room that filters so much I broke it but they're a massive PITA unless you can permanently connect it to a drain.

G

Wolfie666 Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:07

You could go the environmentally friendly route which is currently in vogue - Low maintenance plants.

Just watch out for fly infestation & excrement replacing the unwanted dust.

"Plants absorb particles from the air at the same time that they take in carbon dioxide, which is then processed into oxygen through photosynthesis.

Stephanie Huckestein, instructor of indoor plants at the Hahn Horticulture Garden of Virginia Tech, said plants remove pollutants from the air by absorbing gases through the pores on their leaves."

Full article here -
                                                https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/5-low-maintenance-plants-that-can-purify-the-air-in-your-home-office/70002050               

Will I Aint Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:08

Are ionisers still a thing?They used to use them in demos to clear smoke fill boxes, not to rid the smoke but to stop the particles from floating in the air.I would have thought part of the issue of static attraction is the persistence of the particles in the air which are then attracted to your equipment.

dib Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:09

Dust settles at about 300mm per hour in still air.
Cover your a/v kit overnight, close all room openings, and vacuum everything with a HEPA filtered vacuum clean, nilfisk are good, in the morning.
Unfortunately you take more particulates in with you when you want to use the room.
Sounds like you need tacmats and clean room clothing, not really fun. You'd also have to remove all soft furnishings, unless they were nylon.
Sound like a cleaning regime and an enclosed filtered cabinet would be best.
https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/joypixels/[email protected]/png/64/1f637.png

stuart07970 Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:09

There’s a company called Allergy Cosmos who sell a whole range of air filters.
i think Blue Air is quite a popular brand but I think you’ll be looking at £500

mushii Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:10

And what about epithelial cell shedding? Maybe a dermal barrier cream augmented with a Tyvek suit and tornado full face filter mask. Some neoprene gloves and over boots may also be appropriate.

Mayandi2 Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:10

Would it not be cheaper to buy a space suit from E-bay?

Fabien Publish time 1-12-2019 21:26:12

Just buy a positive air pressure system for your house (like they have at McLaren HQ)
Pages: 1 [2]
View full version: Dust Control in rooms