Subject: HEPA vacuum cleaners
Iona McCraith <iona.mccraith [at] sympatico__ca> writes >I am considering purchasing a vacuum with HEPA filter for cleaning >artefacts and archival collections with heavy dust or mould. I have >been looking at the Nilfisk GM80, which I have previously used and >liked and another model the 3M Portable 1 HP Motor Vacuum, which >also has a Type 1 HEPA filter. I would like to hear from anyone who >has used either or both these models. ... We used Nilfisk GM80 for mould infestation cleanup and have been using it since for regular shelf cleaning. In both cases, majority of the materials have been rare books, most of them 18th-century, in various condition, some not dusted for more than fifteen years. I have also used it on a couple of objects, one of them beaded Victorian bell pull. With all the attachments available and the ability to adjust the suction, it proved so far very versatile for our needs. We were particularly impressed by its ability to remove almost completely the mould residue on some of the bindings--not on all but on some. It could be that the residue was powdery enough to be removed with a cleaning cloth all the same but the vacuum did the job admiringly well. Nilfisk is an expensive proposition. However, before buying it we had acquired another HEPA vacuum (I cannot remember the brand--we returned it since--so this is not negative advertising for 3M). When the conservator was preparing for the first time to demonstrate its proper use to the shelf-cleaning crew she discovered that its suction could not be adjusted and was far too powerful for the bindings and that the assortment of attachments was more appropriate for home than collection cleaning. Its price was about a third of Nilfisk's price. Anna A. Malicka Collections Care Manager Lewis Walpole Library Yale University 154 Main Street Farmington, CT 06032 860-677-2140 or 860-409-7096 Fax: 860-677-6369 *** Conservation DistList Instance 17:70 Distributed: Sunday, May 23, 2004 Message Id: cdl-17-70-001 ***Received on Thursday, 20 May, 2004