Most of us know that we should change the filter in our home heating and air conditioning system monthly, but why? What does it do?
The role of the filter is twofold. First, it traps dirt, dust, pet dander, pollen and other allergens and helps keep the air you’re breathing inside your home cleaner.
It also protects the heat exchangers, like the evaporator, from becoming blocked with debris which reduces its efficiency. The mixture of condensate and debris at the evaporator can result in mold growth —that musty odor you may have experienced at one time or another—that could pose health risks to those exposed to it.
Yeah, this filter has a big job to do-protecting a houseful of air. But what about the air in the cabin of your customer’s car? Doesn’t that need to offer the same kind of protection?
You bet it does. Maybe even more.
In addition to all the pollutants already mentioned, consider a car stuck in traffic. Vehicle emissions like carbon monoxide, diesel particulates, bits of tire rubber, and brake friction material are all trying to find their way inside. Keeping them out is the job of the cabin air filter. And just like the filter in your customer’s home, the cabin filter is there to protect the heat exchangers (primarily the evaporator core) from becoming restricted and growing strange fuzzy stuff.