Dust indicator on your purifier stuck high or bouncing around randomly? The dust sensor reads particles in the air, and when it is dirty or blocked it feeds the purifier bad information, throwing off the display and auto mode.
Here is how the dust sensor works and how to fix it.
This article will teach you:
- What the dust sensor does
- Why it reads wrong
- How to clean and test it
- When it has failed
Why the Dust Sensor Misreads
- Dust on the optical chamber.
- A clogged sensor inlet.
- Cooking smoke or humidity spiking readings.
- A worn sensor module.
What You’ll Need
- A cotton swab and compressed air
- A soft brush
- Your owner’s manual
How to Fix the Dust Sensor
- Unplug it. Power down before opening the sensor door.
- Clean the chamber. Puff air and swab the optical chamber and inlet.
- Clear the vents. Make sure air can reach the sensor freely.
- Recheck in clean air. Confirm the reading drops in a clean room.
Pro Tip: A dust sensor near a kitchen will spike on cooking smoke and steam, which is normal, not a fault. Move the purifier away from the stove if it constantly reads high there.
When to Look a Little Deeper
Because the dust sensor governs auto behavior, it helps to check related parts, and reviewing a dirty sensor, an auto mode issue, or a bad smell can reveal the cause.
When to Call a Pro
Cleaning is DIY. If the reading stays wrong in genuinely clean air after cleaning, the sensor module has failed and usually means replacing the unit.
Wrapping Up
A misreading dust sensor is usually dirty. Here’s the recap:
- Unplug before opening.
- Clean the optical chamber and inlet.
- Clear the sensor vents.
- Recheck in a clean room.
Clean the chamber, and readings settle. You’ve got this.