Anyone use a ozone generator?

I use Ozone in my home and my salt water reef tank.



That being state, I do run ozone (house unit) in my car every month for (1) hour. That is all.



but that unit looks like, well a ripoff. I would use a house unit to rid the smell then return use back in your home...That is me though.
 
no, not if used as it should. Anything in high dosages is bad.



I think the EPA limits is like .08 ppm. Been using ozone in my home for years (due to my 3 dogs). Also my reef tank; inject .020 mg/hour.



I would not live without it. If you are smart about it (like anything) you will be fine.
 
Even with moderate to low levels of ozone in the air in my office or home, my nose starts to burn and my eyes water. Ozone generators make me feel sick, though it does take funk out of the air while in use. The generators I occasionally use produce ozone "within the healthy limit." One is the mini Ionic Breeze plug-in for my office, and the other is some whole-house generator capable of ozone-ing 3,000 sq/ft (though I have it turned nearly all the way down).

With that said, I really have to question the long-term effects of ozone being generated indoors. Sure, HEPA air filters may be loud and not practicle for automotive use other than in A/C units, but atleast they leave a refreshing true fresh smell in the air.
 
ahunt01 said:
Even with moderate to low levels of ozone in the air in my office or home, my nose starts to burn and my eyes water. Ozone generators make me feel sick, though it does take funk out of the air while in use. The generators I occasionally use produce ozone "within the healthy limit." One is the mini Ionic Breeze plug-in for my office, and the other is some whole-house generator capable of ozone-ing 3,000 sq/ft (though I have it turned nearly all the way down).

With that said, I really have to question the long-term effects of ozone being generated indoors. Sure, HEPA air filters may be loud and not practicle for automotive use other than in A/C units, but atleast they leave a refreshing true fresh smell in the air.



If using onzone you should not smell it at all. If you do, you are doing something incorrect.



But that being stated most times it is the same links and posts on Ozone. I have seen then starting in the back 1990’s. Some people use it and like it. Some are scared to death of it. Some think smog and ozone are the samething; which they are not.



http://www.ozoneservices.com/articles/007.htm



Oh, Lexus now has a UV bulb (produces ozone) in there HVAC sys to clean the air.
 
Well, for the Ionic Breeze, I can't use it incorrectly... it just plugs into the wall outlet. Oh sure I can turn the big unit at home all the way up and it feels like it could strip the paint off the walls lol.



But back to the topic of using it in automobiles, the big unit works great on high for an hour to remove smells for awhile. When I had my Civic repainted, paint smell was pretty strong in the cabin. Ozone blasting the interior for an hour pretty much removed the smell, and to my surprise it really didn't come back. I'm okay with Ozone in that regard. I would imagine it would do good job removing cig. smells.
 
Ozone is very effective at destroying odors because it does so at the molecular level of the source. It can be a more effective odor remover than chemical/mechanical cleaning methods that only reach into the very top layers of surfaces.



O3 molecules are very unstable and will seek out and react very quickly to give up an oxygen atom and return to the pure O2 state. So, once the interior is aired out, there is no reason to worry about any residual ozone hanging around that may be considered harmful. Ozone is a powerful oxidizer and you shouldn't breathe a high conc. of it in a confined space. I don't think that you could ever get a high enough conc. of ozone over a sufficiently long period of time to harm anything inside the interior of a car with a typical ozone generator.



You may want to try using a small fan to ensure the ozonated air is well dispersed throughout the car to help saturate every inch of the interior. Be sure to also run the ac/heating system fans for a period of time, too.
 
I agree. Unless the user had 10,000 mg/h of ozone in 100 sq/ft (example here). It will dissipate at a very high rate in a short amount of time.



Overtime and high(er) levels, plastic will get brittle and might discolor. Again that is running ozone 24/7 and at high(er) rates.
 
Those ionic breezes are not ozonators, I believe they are negative ion generators, not the same thing. Hotels frequently use ozonators in smoking rooms, or if you have a pet in the room (which typically involves a $50 or so non refundable fee that covers the service). Negative ion generators are often paired with hepa filters to help clump airborne particles to the negative ions, for better trapping in the hepa (and also making a nice mess on whatever it's blowing at)..and as posted above, ozone generators will actually stop something from smelling on a long term basis. I would recommend putting the windows up, putting the fan or a/c on recirculate, and blasting the car with ozone for a while... Don't breathe it in when you first open the door to shut it off and you'll be fine..
 
chml17l said:
Ozone is very effective at destroying odors because it does so at the molecular level of the source. It can be a more effective odor remover than chemical/mechanical cleaning methods that only reach into the very top layers of surfaces.



O3 molecules are very unstable and will seek out and react very quickly to give up an oxygen atom and return to the pure O2 state. So, once the interior is aired out, there is no reason to worry about any residual ozone hanging around that may be considered harmful. Ozone is a powerful oxidizer and you shouldn't breathe a high conc. of it in a confined space. I don't think that you could ever get a high enough conc. of ozone over a sufficiently long period of time to harm anything inside the interior of a car with a typical ozone generator.



You may want to try using a small fan to ensure the ozonated air is well dispersed throughout the car to help saturate every inch of the interior. Be sure to also run the ac/heating system fans for a period of time, too.

^^^^



Correct, I've used them quite a bit to get rid of mold and mildew smells out of houses, rv's and cars.



Here are a couple of things to note. NOT all plastics or plasticized rubber do well with Ozone. Also you would want to do the ozone after you clean the interior, and the interior is 100% dry. The reason being if o3 is added to h20 you end up with a nasty bleaching effect that coats everything in a funky greasy PITA substance. It can also discolor fabrics and other pieces. Run it when interior is 100% dry.



After you run the ozone you'll want to do a second wipe down and then use all of your interior products for sealing, conditioning, and protecting.



Why not just run the ozone before you clean the interior? Well then it has to work through all of the multitudes of dirty odors and soils. This will increase your ozone time exponentially. We are talking a day or two. You want to keep the time under 12 hours of use at any time. I think in fact most ozone machines have a 2-3 hour timer that you have to reset.



Ozone is a great odor control tool, when the soils, dirt, grease, protein matter that is causing the odor is removed, cleaned, and or disinfected. Without doing this your odor will be back in a matter of hours.



An example of this is smoke particles in a headliner, or antaclara (suede) leather. Until you clean this out as best you can the smoke particles will re propagate the vehicle in short order.



So in summary just like everything else, it is all about prep work and the processed used not about how long you use it or if you use it.





~Aaron
 
The ionic breeze is total garbage, I'll third that... Negative ion generators are only helpful and reasonably effective if combined with a hepa filter, as they cling to airborne particles and make them easier to filter out, or stick to your walls etc. I always laugh when I see those cig lighter plug in ionizers or the one people wear around their neck on airplanes...what a joke.
 
Yeah the ionic breeze does stink, but it also removes funk. I did not know it was not an ozone generator. Perhaps the big unit I have at home is not either, though I seem to recall reading that it produced ozone that "left the house smelling like a spring meadow" or some kind of crap like that lol. I believe the unit is Living Air. I don't recall...perhaps I've inhaled too many ions ;)
 
The unit for the home I think, as you stated that does 3,000 sg/ft is as you stated Living Air. It is/was made by Ecoquest (now apline air). It should have a glass plate or ceremic plate itside that gives of ozone. It is like a corona discharge.
 
generally they are rated to produce x ozone as if they were on 24/7. that is significantly different than a comercial ozone machine, the purpose there is to produce x ozone PPM in 3-4 hours, rest produce it again.
 
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