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Air Movers

Air movers are high-velocity fans that accelerate evaporation from wet floors, carpets, and walls following water damage, the core drying tool in IICRC S500 structural drying protocols alongside dehumidifiers. Axial air movers direct high-CFM airflow across flat surfaces; centrifugal models deliver more focused, penetrating airflow into wall cavities, subfloors, and tight spaces. XPOWER and Namco models for restoration contractors and facility maintenance teams.

Original price $3,494.00 - Original price $3,494.00
Original price
$3,494.00
$3,494.00 - $3,494.00
Current price $3,494.00

XPOWER XtremeDry Mojave XDP1 DIY Drying System – LGR, 4 Air Movers, HEPA, 110V

XPOWER
In stock

XPOWER XtremeDry Mojave DIY Pro-Drying System – Model XDP1 The XPOWER XtremeDry Mojave XDP1 is a pre-assembled water damage drying kit containing a...

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Original price $3,494.00 - Original price $3,494.00
Original price
$3,494.00
$3,494.00 - $3,494.00
Current price $3,494.00

Air Movers Engineered for Water Damage Drying Speed

How CFM Ratings Determine Structural Drying Outcomes

Airflow volume, measured in cubic feet per minute, is the variable restoration contractors control most directly on a water loss job. Low-CFM units move surface moisture into the air column but leave bound water in subflooring, wall cavities, and concrete slabs untouched. High-CFM axial and snail-style air movers generate directed velocity that strips the boundary layer of saturated air clinging to wet material, which is the actual mechanism that drives evaporation deeper into the structure.

Axial air movers push large volumes of air across wide surface areas, making them suited to open-plan floors and exposed ceilings after pipe bursts or roof leaks. Snail-style (centrifugal) units concentrate airflow into a tighter stream at higher static pressure, which lets the air penetrate wall cavities and carpet-over-pad installations more effectively. Most restoration contractors stage both types on the same job depending on the material class. For guidance on drying system design, IICRC Standard S500 covers psychrometric targets, airflow placement ratios, and the number of air movers required per square foot under different Category 1, 2, and 3 water intrusion scenarios.

Snail vs. Axial: Matching the Unit to the Material

The choice between centrifugal and axial units comes down to what the air needs to do once it leaves the machine. Centrifugal air movers from XPOWER and Abatement Technologies deliver focused, high-pressure streams that hug floor surfaces at a low angle, pulling moisture out of hardwood and engineered flooring without lifting finish or cupping boards. Their stackable design also matters on commercial losses where a restoration van carries 20 or more units at once.

Axial units cover ground faster and run quieter in occupied commercial buildings, which matters when a facility manager needs a school or office operational within 48 hours. Daisy-chaining capability, low amp draw, and grounded three-prong plugs on a 20-amp circuit determine how many units you can actually run in a given zone without tripping breakers. The EPA mold remediation guide for commercial buildings recommends beginning drying within 24 to 48 hours of water intrusion to prevent secondary microbial growth, which means equipment availability and power setup on day one directly affects the scope of the full remediation.

Related: Commercial Dehumidifiers · Flood Water Extraction Equipment · Air Scrubbers · Desiccant Dehumidifiers

Pairing Air Movers With Dehumidification on Large Commercial Losses

An air mover without a dehumidifier running in the same zone adds moisture back into the air column instead of removing it. On commercial losses spanning multiple floors, restoration contractors calculate the grain-per-pound deficit in the drying zone and size LGR or desiccant dehumidifiers to handle the evaporative load the air movers generate. IICRC S500 psychrometric calculations set the benchmark for this balance, and most professional contractors log temperature, relative humidity, and moisture content readings at least twice daily to document drying progress for insurance carriers.

Desiccant dehumidifiers outperform LGR units in low-temperature environments such as crawl spaces in winter or refrigerated warehouse losses, where condensation coil efficiency drops. Pairing desiccant units with high-CFM air movers in those conditions shortens the drying window considerably and reduces the risk of secondary damage claims. ASHRAE humidity control guidance provides the engineering basis for target moisture levels in different building material assemblies, which restoration contractors cite in documentation packages submitted to adjusters.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take air movers to dry water damage?
Most water restoration projects take 2-5 days depending on severity. Air movers accelerate evaporation by creating high-velocity airflow over wet surfaces, while dehumidifiers remove moisture from the air. Mold can start within 24-48 hours, making quick deployment critical for preventing further damage.
How many air movers do I need for water damage restoration?
General guidelines: one air mover per 400-500 square feet of hard flooring, one per 300 square feet of carpeting, or one per 100-150 square feet of walls and ceilings. Professional restoration typically uses multiple units positioned strategically to maximize airflow across all affected surfaces.
What CFM rating should I look for in air movers?
Professional air movers typically range from 2,000-3,500 CFM. Higher CFM ratings move more air and accelerate drying. For large-scale water damage or commercial applications, choose models with 2,800+ CFM. Smaller residential jobs may suffice with 2,000-2,500 CFM units.
Should air movers run continuously during drying?
Yes, air movers should run on high speed continuously throughout the drying process for maximum effectiveness. Daily moisture readings should be taken, and drying is only complete when structural materials reach safe moisture levels (typically below 15% for wood, 1% for concrete).
Do I need dehumidifiers with air movers?
Absolutely. Air movers and dehumidifiers work together - air movers increase evaporation by moving air across wet surfaces, while dehumidifiers remove the excess moisture from the air. Using air movers alone simply moves moisture around without removing it, which can lead to secondary damage and mold growth.

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