Subject: Using vacuum cleaners in display cases
Imogen Herford <imogen.herford [at] bl__uk> writes >... However I am interested to know if it is commonly >understood that vacuum cleaners should never be used in any account, >in any situation, even in empty display cases. ... Perhaps it is too much to assume that dust, that is, particulate matter suspended in air, is accumulating inside the display case. Is that the problem? If the vacuum cleaner is going to be used to remove normal dust and dirt, then the vacuum cleaner seems to be the obvious, inexpensive, efficient choice of tool. The vacuum cleaner should have a HEPA filter, and if one obtains a long enough hose, then the body of the machine never needs to enter the cabinet and beat against furniture or artifacts. Even if the motor body doesn't ever enter an exhibit space, the motor body has to be leak proof for dust. The idea of the vacuum is that the dust goes into the nozzle and is trapped in the filter, so that only clean air exits the machine. Leaking vacuums must be repaired or replaced with ones that don't leak. I used to work at an enormous Canadian museum and we wore out two or three vacuums a year in our efforts to clean exhibits and keep them clean. The people I talk to can hardly imagine that vacuum cleaners could be either the least bit out of style, or controversial, in 2007. Are there problems cleaning with vacuums? Of course one needs to be extremely careful when moving oneself and a vacuum hose and a brush inside a display cabinet. As I recall, most cabinets were cleared of artifacts before we vacuumed them clean. Artifacts were cleaned using vacuums, separately, when the vacuum was the right tool to remove loose dust. Showcases are normally too tightly packed to allow a human inside with a vacuum and brush. We also had lots of open exhibits to clean, which could not have been cleaned and kept clean in any other manner, than with a vacuum and a brush. Vacuum power can be controlled on good, modern vacuums, so brutal strength from the machine is not a necessary evil implied by "vacuum" cleaning. Of course there can be problems bashing into things with the wand and the hose, which is one more reason to demand that competent people be found and trusted to do your cleaning. You have to have people who are productive, agile, motivated, and careful. So, no, it is not commonly understood that vacuum cleaners should never be employed to clean exhibits. Just the opposite. They are exactly the tool you need to use for dust removal. One can also take a few steps to minimize the deposition of dust, much of which arrives with visitors and outside air. Keep doors closed, keep windows closed, have a robust fan at the entrance air lock to blow loose dirt off of people's clothes, a sort of positive pressure entrance vestibule. Not every museum can have one of these. Within the building, one can seal the showcase as well as possible, then pressurize it by pumping in filtered air. By creating a "positive pressure showcase" you can effectively eliminate the accumulation of dust in your showcase. The air is pulled through a filter and pushed into the showcase by a quiet muffin fan. Because of the positive interior pressure, all the leaking zones push away dirty air, so the interior stays clean. Only clean air enters. Even very large exhibits can be kept almost completely free of dust this way. Of course one has to inspect and replace filters from time to time, and fans can wear out after 10,000 or 20,000 hours. Whenever we had a large showcase that would remain filled for more than, say, a year, or permanently, we tended to seal and pressurize it. First of all, it kept the artifacts clean, and secondly, it eliminated the risk of damaging objects while cleaning them, and thirdly, it saved lots of money having staff clean the exhibits. Win, win, win. There is a fourth benefit: workers thought the managers were more clever for keeping the exhibits clean in the first place, as museum workers have a lot of work to do that is more fun than vacuuming. James Hay Senior Conservator Furniture and Decorative Arts Canadian Conservation Institute 1030 Innes Road Ottawa K1A 0M5 Canada *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:11 Distributed: Sunday, June 17, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-11-002 ***Received on Monday, 11 June, 2007