It’s kinda nice to know what you just sucked in is, well, clean enough to want to suck in.
Years ago, a good friend of mine brewed his own homemade beer. Now, not being a beer lover myself, he was desperate for a good review of his homemade brew, so I did the right thing and took a drink. He knew I wouldn’t know the difference. He would’ve been right had what went down next hadn’t. It wasn’t a sip I took, but rather a healthy, showing off my farm boy heritage, swig.
The bitter, acrid taste was enough to keep me happily in my beer-less existence; it was required to chew my way through the ensuing swallow. It had more texture than a hearty vegetable soup with the odor of a backed-up sewer. Not quite ready for the bottling contract. The look on my face didn’t require an explanation let alone an opinion. He took his own taste and promptly filed for an EPA hazardous dumping permit.
Much of the time the air we breathe isn’t much better than my friend’s offering and unknown to us we suffer for the lack of understanding. In the first blog I wrote extensively of the need for not only just filtering the air we breathe but also . . . the need to purify it.
Here’s a couple of line-item facts from the previous article to save you the time of going back and reading it. (Although there is a lot of good information there if you take the time.)
This is great news for those with respiratory and immune system issues. The less work our bodies have to do to eliminate the nasties the more energy they’ll have for healing and restoring at least some measure of wellbeing. Kinda like drinking fresh, clean water vs. swamp sludge drawn from a muddy bog. Sorry about the slightly gross word picture but it does sort of illustrate a growing reality.
There is a plethora more information available in the previous blog, so I am going to stop here. I think this should get the point across.
In short you do have it within your grasp and your budget to put this technology to work for you not only at home but also in the workplace. Following CDC and EPA recommendations as well as taking an aggressive proactive stance to improve your quality of life and long-term health will ensure you are doing everything you can to protect yourselves, your loved ones and your employees from unnecessary illness and disease. (Not to mention the cost of medical bills and lost productivity)
Here, at HallTech Services, a subsidiary of HallTech Engineering, we did the research necessary to find the best of the best in air purification units commercially available in today’s rapidly saturating market. That search still moves forward but for now, we brand the Jade and Cascade units as manufactured in North America, by Surgically Clean Air as being the best of the best. SCA is one of Canada’s fastest growing Fortune 200 companies today. For good reason, what they build works.
With ever increasing awareness regarding the need for cleaner air, it turns out that few units actually utilize far range UV-C light combined with titanium dioxide in a photocatalytic, highly synergistic kill chamber that eliminates 99.87 percent of the pathogens described earlier. (To actually purify the air moving through them). Adding this advanced technology to unequalled filtration media, then it becomes easy to understand when we say the reality of killing the viral load in the air is possible before it becomes the viral load in your lungs. Everything else these units do to protect your health and wellbeing is just icing on the cake. Including re-ionizing the air in the purifying process to reduce fatigue in home and office applications. (No ozone worries here)
For more information or on how to begin protecting yourselves and those close to you, go to www.indoorpurifiedair.com. Take time to view the video attached and as always if you have any questions, feel free to share them here or call (855) 478-7434 (855 4-Purify) for more information and a confidential analysis of your own unique scenario.
Thanks for your time and God Bless!
Tony Hall
HallTech Services
P.S. About my beer brewing friend. He eventually got very good at making his own brand of suds and opened his own microbrewery. He and his forever wife made great craft beers for a living since those early days of his semi-harmless nuclear waste production. Sadly, they retired, and their brands retired with them. As I said, never cared for beer; but theirs quenched a lot of happy thirsts and kept them coming back for more for over five lustra. Rest well old friends. Memories abound.
Welcome to the second edition of my www.indoorpurifiedair.com blog from HallTech Services. You’re all welcome back anytime. Bookmark us as a “just in case”. If for no other reason but to read my “deathless prose” for a chuckle or two, maybe even a bit a good information now and again. Especially if your concerned about living healthier . . . and longer.
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