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Venkatesh Rao ☀️ pfp
Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Discovered with my new Aranet CO2 meter that our bedroom is 1800-2000 ppm at night 😫. No wonder I often wake up fatigued. Can’t have door open because cats disrupt sleep and can’t have windows open because cold and street noise. Daytime is okay (<1200 indoors) but not ideal (<1000). Gotta investigate hvac
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danny iskandar pfp
danny iskandar
@daniskandar
Probably try air purifier?
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shazow pfp
shazow
@shazow.eth
Does your door have a gap at the bottom? 1-2" gap would help. Keep in mind: Even if you pump fresh air in, if it has no where to return then the pressure will build until the push does nothing. So need air in *and* air out. Otherwise also look at ERV/HRV, there's standalone units that can be done for one room.
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jacob pfp
jacob
@jacob
I like how you managed to make this channel still somehow related to sensor-maxxing
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Alok Vasudev pfp
Alok Vasudev
@alok
Plants in the bedroom? No idea if that’s enough co2 removal to move needle
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Travis A. Everett pfp
Travis A. Everett
@abathur
Feel this, though our numbers are generally better outside of a few months in winter when we rarely run hvac. I want to sleep with the doors open to keep CO2 down, but partner needs the doors closed for light.
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Ike pfp
Ike
@iw
I think active carbon filters for certain air purifiers can scrub CO2 out of small spaces. They also provide some white noise to mask sleep disturbances.
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aferg pfp
aferg
@aaronrferguson.eth
Yeah I am so glad we got one too…our apt regularly goes over 2000ppm if we don’t have the window open to let that -10 Celsius air in
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