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The Renewable Energy Blog

Archive for February 6th, 2010

by Arwyn Yelf

There’s a bunch of companies that are making things with HEPA labeling on them. There are all sorts of products out there ranging from HEPA vacuum cleaners to HEPA air conditioner filters, and you can generally find many of them in any retail department outlet. With all the different manufacturers that use this term, it’s sometimes difficult to know what you need to be looking for when buying a HEPA air purifier. Let’s examine Hunter HEPA air purifiers to see if they’re your best choice.

What Is Hunter’s Background?

Hunter has actually been around for a long time. In fact, even though they make their living on products that require electricity, they’ve been around since before electricity was a household thing. Way back in 1886, they go their start by inventing a water-driven ceiling fan. It doesn’t get much more innovative than that. Nowadays, Hunter is a fairly well known name in electric ceiling fans, as well as thermostats. They also manufacturer air purifiers and humidifiers.

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by Jane Lemons

If you were driving through a residential area of Phoenix solar panels would not be a likely sight. Solar energy is a free and clean technology. Free in that you are getting energy from the sun. This energy is also renewable. Unfortunately, installing and maintaining panels is not cheap.

Capturing the sun’s energy to power your home during the warmer months will help cut energy costs in the colder months. People who do use the panels can also sell their excess energy back to their utility company in credit units. This will help regulate monthly electricity bills during the colder months.

Maybe I watch too many movies, but I associate Phoenix with a scene showing an orange color terrain. The sun is beating down on cracked clay and a scorpion walking across the screen. Mind you I know this is probably not the case in most parts of Arizona but if it were then Phoenix should be able to be powered by the sun forever. But the truth is solar panels are not a common scene in Phoenix.

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