Rich M. said:Dylos DC1100-Pro . I have not calibrated it against anything else, but I use it, like it, it tells me how my Jet air cleaner is doing, & when I should use a respirator. I'd buy it again, even though it is not cheap....
SRSemenza said:Rich M. said:Dylos DC1100-Pro . I have not calibrated it against anything else, but I use it, like it, it tells me how my Jet air cleaner is doing, & when I should use a respirator. I'd buy it again, even though it is not cheap....
Yes, this is basically how I want to use it.
Do any of them measure the truly small particles in the HEPA range? Or am I not reading the size numbers right? Seems the really small stuff is what is most important.
Seth
SRSemenza said:Ordered and received the Dylos. It was then that I realized that it is not battery operated. Not a huge deal but certainly a nuisance to move it around to check different areas that may or may not be near an outlet.
Any good ones that run on batteries?
Seth
MikeGE said:My Dylos DC1700 has internal rechargeable batteries that will last a couple of days in Monitor mode, or about five hours in continuous mode.
MikeGE said:SRSemenza said:Ordered and received the Dylos. It was then that I realized that it is not battery operated. Not a huge deal but certainly a nuisance to move it around to check different areas that may or may not be near an outlet.
Any good ones that run on batteries?
Seth
My Dylos DC1700 has internal rechargeable batteries that will last a couple of days in Monitor mode, or about five hours in continuous mode.
Cheese said:Just curious Mike, when you use it just to monitor the room performance, do you use it in the particle concentration or mass concentration mode?
SRSemenza said:MikeGE said:SRSemenza said:Ordered and received the Dylos. It was then that I realized that it is not battery operated. Not a huge deal but certainly a nuisance to move it around to check different areas that may or may not be near an outlet.
Any good ones that run on batteries?
Seth
My Dylos DC1700 has internal rechargeable batteries that will last a couple of days in Monitor mode, or about five hours in continuous mode.
Yeah, I see now that the 1700 is a battery unit. I hadn't even noticed that the 1100 is not. But the 1700 is $200 more than the 1100. $475 compared to $260. That price difference seems ridiculous! I will probably just deal with extension cords and plugging it in. Unless there is a realistically priced comparable battery unit.
Seth
live4ever said:Could you use one of those gizmos that converts your power tool batteries to AC? Like Milwaukee Top-off (if you have Milwaukee batteries of course…TopOff is like $99).
Cheese said:live4ever said:Could you use one of those gizmos that converts your power tool batteries to AC? Like Milwaukee Top-off (if you have Milwaukee batteries of course…TopOff is like $99).
That's really a great idea...the Milwaukee Top-Off supports up to 175 watts of power usage. I can't imagine that the Dylos products that are powered by that dinky in-line transformer draw more than 150 watts, probably less. It is curious though that Dylos does not publish the equipment current draw. Very [sad]
I used one last summer to run a DX 93 for sanding a teak chair.
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SRSemenza said:Input on the Dylos transformer is 8.5 watts.
Seth
Cheese said:SRSemenza said:Input on the Dylos transformer is 8.5 watts.
Seth
That's weird Seth...that seems real low.
However if that is the case, Milwaukee claims that their HD12.0 battery will power an average LED TV for 280 minutes. And if the "average LED TV" draws 17 watts, that would give over 9 hours of constant run time for the Dylos.
If the Dylos was used in the monitor mode instead, it should operate for almost 60X that length of time.