I am adding a UV light to my furnace coils. I decided to cut an access panel for easier cleaning and access to the UV light. I did not realize there were these triangular end covers for the A-frame of the furnace evaporator coils.

I don’t see them anywhere online when looking up diagrams of furnace coils. When I search online, it is also not clear if these covers are necessary. Are these covers beneficial? Or can I take one side off to fit the UV light underneath the A-frame?

  • faux2pas@discuss.online
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    10 days ago

    I’m no expert, but I am handy.

    I called my HVAC technician before, and he told me to install mine in the chamber after that one. I have one before it splits.

    Call your HVAC technician and ask them for over the phone advice. My tech offered to install mine for free on my next service.

    I still did mine, and he checked my work and okayed it as “a gold star install.”

    Here is a picture after I installed it and before wiring it.

    Here is a picture after I installed it and still haven’t wired it yet.

    Edit: I don’t have a finished photo, but I will post one on request. I’m too lazy to take a photo and explain why if my wife asks.

    • loopy@lemmy.todayOP
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      10 days ago

      What do you mean by “ before it splits?” I’m still learning a lot, but the general consensus of where to place the UV light was on the bottom side of the A-frame, because that’s where the moisture will accumulate and allow for bacteria and fungus growth.

      I ended up drilling a hole and mounting the light right into that end plate, and then drilling another hole in my new access panel for the cord, and putting duct putty around the hole.

      • faux2pas@discuss.online
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        3 days ago

        “Mine” was a poor choice of words. I didn’t install a UV light, but I did install an air Ionizer. My point wasn’t clear: asking your HVAC tech for advice, since they service your system, I presume, and may have additional details like install pointers or potential impacts on warranties, etc.

        • loopy@lemmy.todayOP
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          5 days ago

          Thanks for pointing that out; I was unaware of that. After educating myself a little, it looks like UV light below about 200nm wavelength generate ozone, but 254nm is the sweet spot for killing microbes. The light I got works at the 254nm wavelength.

          The US EPA recommends a concentration of less than 70ppb, Canada 40ppb, and the WHO 30ppb. This model has been tested by the California Air Resources Board at 13ppb.

          That’s reassuring, but I’m still looking more into this. Do you have any recommended resources for gaining more insight on ozone generation?

          https://www.environics.com/2025/02/17/regulations-ambient-ozone-concentration/

          https://www.environics.com/2025/02/17/regulations-ambient-ozone-concentration/

          https://bioshielduv.com/products/bioshield-magnetic

          • ɔiƚoxɘup@beehaw.org
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            5 days ago

            No, I don’t, and I’m sorry, I just have looked into it before myself, and once I looked into it, decided I wanted to avoid it completely, So my research stopped there.

            I do have a UV bulb that I’ve glued into a tote so that I can sterilize things like my CPAP. After that I will air it out for a very long period of time to make sure that all of that stuff is gotten out.

            One thing that I can tell you that I’ve learned from what I’ve researched is that the more air that flows over the bulb, the more ozone will be generated. So if it’s just sitting there not doing anything in still air and it’s producing a certain amount, having it in your AC unit might produce more. So that might be an angle you might want to look into.

            Practically speaking for an AC unit, what I think would be really useful is to be able to turn it on at the beginning of the season to kill whatever bacteria might be in there, or to just be able to periodically turn it on.

            • loopy@lemmy.todayOP
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              4 days ago

              Huh, I hadn’t thought about turning the light on for short periods. And if ozone is mostly generated with moving air, then turning the light on with the furnace off seems to be safest. Thanks for the suggestion.

              • ɔiƚoxɘup@beehaw.org
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                3 days ago

                If your intent is to sterilize the coils so that they can’t grow anything funky, then yes, probably that would be for the best.

                Also, you could certainly test it by setting it to turn on when the furnace is on so you can see how stinky the ozone is. If it smells kind of strong, then that’s probably too much, right?