Ultraviolet Carpet Cleaners

Las Vegas, United States

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Description

Specialties

Turbo

-

UV



is the smallest yet mos

t

powerful commercial grade UVC

room

sanitizer

on the market. Due to its size it is

ideal for sanitizing

ambulances, bathrooms,

lockers,

garages,

restroom

stalls

, kitchens,

small office

s,

cabins,

kennels

,

cages,

store

rooms, waiting

rooms, examining rooms,

showers

,

smaller

hotel rooms,

play rooms,

dressing rooms,

basements,

attics,

closet

s

,

dental offices

,

laboratories

,

garbage areas,

school buses, vans, trucks

, RV trailers

,

camper

s and much more!

Turbo

-

is

lig

ht weigh

t but

packs

a

heavy

germicidal

punch killing bacteria, virus and mold.

Turbo

-

UV



is capable of safe

ly

disinfecting surfaces

&

air

in a

room using

UV

C energy in as little as a few minutes.

UVC has been

long

proven in independent

laboratory testing to successfully disinfect

surfaces and air.

Data reveals that only

50% of surfaces within a patient room

are

manually

disinfected at terminal

cleaning.

Turbo

-

UV



is

also

fully remote controlle

d

for added ease and

safety.

Rugged

Reliable

Rapid

Respected

Manual disinfecting misses

over

50% of microbes in a given space

.

Deverick Anderson, MD

, MPH

Duke

Infection Control Outreach

Network

Only 8 l

bs…

History

Established in 2015.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — New research suggests that the addition of ultraviolet light to the brushing and suction of a vacuum cleaner can almost double the removal of potentially infectious microorganisms from a carpet’s surface when compared to vacuuming alone.

Researchers say the findings suggest that incorporating the germicidal properties of UV light into vacuuming might have promise in reducing allergens and pathogens from carpets, as well.

«What this tells us is there is a commercial vacuum with UV technology that’s effective at reducing surface microbes. This has promise for public health, but we need more data,» said Timothy Buckley, associate professor and chair of environmental health sciences at Ohio State University and senior author of the study