I’m moving into my own place soon, and I’d like to get a cat. I do have an allergy to cat dander, and I’ve read that cat dander allergies are worse than dog dander allergies because the allergens tend to stick to clothes and fabrics (like curtains and carpets). I understand ionizers work by sucking in air particles and giving the pollutants a negative charge so they "cling" to surfaces and can be cleaned up when the carpet is vacuumed or the drapes are washed. If this is the case, will an air ionizer really help my cat dander allergy at all, since it seems like the allergenic particles wouldn’t necessarily be airborne?
I’m moving into my own place soon, and I’d like to get a cat. I do have an allergy to cat dander, and I’ve read that cat dander allergies are worse than dog dander allergies because the allergens tend to stick to clothes and fabrics (like curtains and carpets). I understand ionizers work by sucking in air particles and giving the pollutants a negative charge so they "cling" to surfaces and can be cleaned up when the carpet is vacuumed or the drapes are washed. If this is the case, will an air ionizer really help my cat dander allergy at all, since it seems like the allergenic particles wouldn’t necessarily be airborne?
I have really bad allergies and I live in a dusty area. Do they get rid of the dust too because I hate dusting because I have a lot of surfaces and its super annoying. I’ve been looking at the Ionic Breeze and a Honeywell with a Hepa.
I have two cats and some feather duvets. My doors and windows are almost always open. The house seems to be covered in dust, even after I vacuum. Cat fur and feathers fragments from the duvet cover surfaces right away. I really hate vacuuming, so I don't do it as much as I should. I even bought a roomba so that it could clean while I was at work, but I don't use it much because I still have to set up the room to be roomba-ed.
If I buy an air purifier, will it help make the house less dusty and furry and feathery between vacuuming sessions? Or does it just remove fine dust particles, pollutants, and pollens?
In the wake of the recent fires here in Southern California some have strong smoke odors in their vehicles. It was suggested to use Ozium Glycolized Air Sanitizer to get rid of odor. Upon reading the bottle it advises the following "Be sure to spray it away from any drapes, walls, plastic, vinyl, painted surfaces, animals, baked goods, radioactive materials, etc." Why is this statement on the bottle and what would happen if I did spray it towards these items?