Last updated: 2 Jun 2026 | 15 Views |
Meow, a 28-year-old office worker, lives in a 2nd-floor condo in Huai Khwang, Bangkok. Her unit sits below a moisture-trapping roof, and rainy-season humidity reaches 78%.
"I noticed black spots in the bathroom corners and ceiling. Cleaners worked for 2 weeks, then the mold came back. Worst of all, I started sneezing, eyes itching, and got a red rash on my arms. My allergist diagnosed mold-spore allergy."
Indoor molds release 2-10 micron spores that float through rooms and can:
Indoor humidity above 60% is the main driver. The CDC recommends keeping it below 50%.
The AP-907 air purifier captures 99.97% of airborne mold spores with HEPA H13, optionally combined with UV-C/photocatalyst to kill mold drawn into the unit.
Before: Sneezing and itchy eyes all season, red arm rash, bathroom mold blooming twice a month, 1,200 baht/month in meds.
After AP-907: No sneezing, no rash, indoor humidity dropped to 55%, mold blooms only once a month, life feels better.
"I felt it the first night — air seemed lighter, my breath cleaner. The arm rash cleared in 2 weeks. AP-907 is the best purifier I've ever bought." — Meow, Huai Khwang, Bangkok.
Q1: Replace a dehumidifier?
A: No — AP-907 captures airborne spores; pair it with a dehumidifier for humidity.
Q2: Run 24/7 in rainy season?
A: Recommended on Auto mode, especially after rainfall.
Q3: Can filters grow mold?
A: Designed for humid environments; dry new HEPA filters first if stored long term.
Q4: Use in the bathroom?
A: Not recommended — place in the adjacent bedroom to catch spores escaping.
Q5: Existing heavy mold — will it still help?
A: Greatly reduces airborne spores; also fix the moisture source.