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REVIEW: "Air-Dryr" Fights Mold & Mildew in RVs

We recently picked up our second Air-Dryr device (http://goo.gl/g92Kl3). We use an Air-Dryr to combat moist air and its impact on our RV. An Air-Dryr helps to keep our RV free of mold and mildew.

These devices are useful in any humid climate. We use ours inside our Airstream whenever the trailer is placed in storage.

An Air-Dryr can help keep the interior of your RV free of nasty mold and mildew. This is the smaller 500 model. (Click the pic for more info.)

When we’re not using the Air-Dryr in the trailer, it goes in our brick-and-mortar basement.

Our new Air-Dryr is the 500 model, which handles 500 cubic feet of space.

We also have an Air-Dryr 1000 which covers (you guessed it) 1000 cubic feet of space.

Why did we get the smaller model? The 1000 may be a little bit of overkill for our 25-foot long trailer. We thought we’d start using the 500 model in the trailer, and the 1000 can go to work in our basement.

Air-Dryr devices are extremely simple in terms of design and operation. I appreciate the simplicity of this product.

Choose the Air-Dryr 1000 if you have 1000 cubic feet of space. Here's our 1000 model hard at work inside our Airstream. (Click the pic for more info.)

There’s not even a power switch of any kind! To operate, you simply plug the Air-Dryr into a standard 110/220 Volt power source.

They work to dry moist air by heating it.

Damp air is heated to the point moisture is held in suspension (above dew point), then released through the circular top vents of the device.

As warmed air rises, cooler damp air is drawn in, where it too is heated.

Air-Dryr costs no more to operate than the burning of a light bulb.

For safety, there’s a thermal cutoff that turns the unit off should air flow be impeded.

If you own an RV and live in a moist or humid climate, an Air-Dryr is a small investment to ward off nasty mold and mildew.

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