Did the filter can get wet at any point? Is it used? Do you high relative humidity?
Did you dry a wet dog with the blower?[/QUOTE not wet, low humidity, no dog. Lol
Yes I do, 38% -40% rhYeah sounds like a humidity issue right there, do you use a hygrometer? If so what’s your RH?
Filter is brand new out of the box , RH IS 40% AS soon as I turned on it stunkHow old's the filter?
Old filter + high rH = something growing that you don't want growing = wet dog smell
Filter is brand new out of the box , RH IS 40% AS soon as I turned on it stunk
300 might be to high. 150 would be better if you try this. This does dry out a wet filter but you need to do it slow. And if you do keep an eye on it rotate the filter. I used aluminum foil taped around the door opening as mine was a bit to big to fit in the oven to keep the heat in. It can catch fire from the heat as it is just charcoal and from first hand experience you dont want that to happen as they are a bitch to put out. Better have a fire plan if you do thisif it seems like its coming out of the filter, you can bake them. as long as your filter isn't bigger than your oven, stick it in there at about 300 for a couple of hours. it'll probably make your kitchen stink for a little while, but air it out. anything growing in your filter will be gone, and the smell should follow soon after
How are you smelling it if your pulling air thur it is my question. If setup correctly you shouldn't smell it unless your not venting outside.Filter is brand new out of the box , RH IS 40% AS soon as I turned on it stunk
Lol true. ThanksCould be a "new filter" smell, could be something growing in the filter (you have no idea how it was stored before you got it, I no idea how long you've had it before opening the box, so many variables), could be something in the ducting.
Take the filter off, run the fan, see if there's any smell. If not, then look closer at your filter as that's the source of the niff. It might just need a while with air blowing through it to clear it, might be a bad filter, can't tell without physically getting a whiff myself as even the interwebz doesn't have smell-o-vision yet (thankfully, or the number of fart videos that would appear on YouTube would make things reach "toxic" level).
.
I willyeah, they default at the Stinky Dog Aroma Pack
if you dont specify.
Sorry, you must have missed the
Aroma Options when you purchased it, ask next time if you dont see it.
Something fermenting in the filter itself, especially where the filter joins the fan/ducting?How are you smelling it if your pulling air thur it is my question. If setup correctly you shouldn't smell it unless your not venting outside.
I never seen where he said he stored it. He said it’s brand new. Plus if he smelled it as soon as he turned it on sounds like he’s pushing air through the filter.Something fermenting in the filter itself, especially where the filter joins the fan/ducting?
You're then pulling air over the nasty bit and, voila, everything's sent out in glorious pong-o-rama.
Had something similar when someone stored airco filters in a "less than suitable environment", the cardboard boxes were rotten with damp and he stuck the filter in despite the warnings he was given.
It didn't stay in for long.
You can also be looking simply at "storage time", just because it's fresh out of the box doesn't mean it's actually "fresh" and most do have some sort of shelf life as they can take in moisture from the air. Go beyond that limit, stinky time.
So many variables, but mostly when I've seen the stink in airco with new filters it clears in a couple of days of operation as things get killed off by the air movement. Sometimes, however, it doesn't and the only option is to get a new filter.
I never seen where he said he stored it. He said it’s brand new. Plus if he smelled it as soon as he turned it on sounds like he’s pushing air through the filter.