in fact in addressed indoor ozone in many ways.
It addressed indoor ozone levels, as well as natural levels at ground 
level that could come in and refered to the combination of those and of 
multiple machines, and the use of machines for given size areas in smaller 
areas and distance from machines. It refered to carpet, and embalming 
fluid and listed many papers produced to support the discussion.
It referred to microbes in ceiling tiles and that levels 5x that of safe 
would be required to kill microbes though higher if they were to be 
effected once the ozone was turned off; and how those embedded microbes 
may not be effected at all.





On Wed, 23 Jun 2010, John Sherrer wrote:

> I did get the link to open.
> This never addressed indoor ozone.  But it did help me understand ozone 
> warnings.
>
> John
> http://WhiteCane.org
> http://BlindWoodWorker.com
> http://HolyTeaClub.comcom\whitecane
> http://anellos.ws
>
>  ----- Original Message -----
>  From: Dan Rossi
>  To: [email protected]
>  Sent: Wednesday, June 23, 2010 8:02 AM
>  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Air Purification Systems
>
>
>
>  Lenny,
>
>  Thanks very much for this link. It was an interesting read and I will
>  send it to everyone who tells me that Ozone generators are a good thing.
>
>  John, I guess you were right, there is good Ozone and bad Ozone. Good up
>  high, bad near by. Ozone in the upper atmosphere is vital to the Earth,
>  but a serious pollutant at ground level. So you are, in fact, generating
>  the bad kind of Ozone in your house.
>
>  --
>  Blue skies.
>  Dan Rossi
>  Carnegie Mellon University.
>  E-Mail: [email protected]
>  Tel: (412) 268-9081
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>

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