This was posted 8 months 21 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Trusens Z-2000 Air Purifier $159.60 (Was $399) + Delivery ($0 C&C/ in-Store) @ JB Hi-Fi

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92ZJXN9F23N42T

Until Sunday 13th of August you can get 60% off^ the current ticketed price of a TruSens Z-1000 or Z-2000 Air Purifier.

Simply present the Exclusive Coupon online by visiting jbhifi.com.au, adding the product to your shopping cart & entering the Exclusive Coupon code in the space provided at checkout.

Limit of 1 each per Coupon. Available instore and online. While stocks last. Offer ends Sunday 13th August 2023.

I own the Z-2000 air purifier and it’s incredibly good. An absolute steal at this price. Check your email for a coupon code or I’m sure others will put theirs in the comments.

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  • +6

    Hey OP, this is from the newsletter subscription and is not a unique code

    Coupon: 92ZJXN9F23N42T

    • +1

      Thank you for the find.

  • thanks op

    does it have specific use case scenarios? as in, specific health conditions or specific places where the air quality is bad? as i understand, the air quality in Australia is very good. forgive my ignorance.

    • +3

      Yes, the air quality is good (less smoke, pollution, dust, etc), but there are higher number of allergens (pollens) in the air that causes hay fever, also stale air in a closed room lets a dust settle and this old dust also causes lot of sinus issues.

      This sort of air purifier helps with these cases. These certainly helps with the smoke and pollution, also helps people with asthma, sinus issues, etc.

    • +1

      I have a cat and cat allergies (unfortunately developed 2 years into ownership). I've run a small purifier in the office and does make a difference to breathing quality.

      • +2

        You have an Office cat? ^_^

    • +2

      Bushfire smoke is a big problem in Perth metro area when DFES decide to take nature into their own hands and do prescribed burns - all the smoke runs down the hills and blankets the city. These will help with that.

    • +6

      In general, outdoor air quality in Australia is better than in some other countries. But this misses the mark - air purifiers scrub indoor air, which is often much more polluted than outside - cooking, gas burners, wood fired heaters can create very poor indoor air quality. Then add diesel cars that generate much more pollution than petrol, "hazard reduction" burns and bushfires that create smoke and particulates that get into your house and stay there.

      This map may provide some more clarity on the level of pollution in your area.
      https://www.theguardian.com/environment/ng-interactive/2023/…

      • A good explanation. I have pondered the usefulness of an air purifier, but in a house (SE QLD) where the windows are open 98% of the year and there is good airflow is it largely pointless?

  • +1

    Bought the bigger z-3000 few weeks back for $250, and it is quite good. It is a steal at this price.

    • +2

      But is it 1000 better?

      • +1

        oh! Absolutely. I feel the air hitting me 1000 time better, not that I have compared it with the z-2000, but I am sure it is.

    • where?

  • +5

    Air filter replacement appears to be around $79 which is quite pricey imo

    • +1

      Can you just wash these?

    • Definitely something to keep an eye on - for example both Samsung AX60s and AX90s (requires 2 x filters) can be found on sale sub$400 and filters cost ~$150.

    • Aren’t there generic brand filters?

    • The carbon filters are 3 for $40

      The outer filter is washable.

      • Plus the hepa filter which is around $100 and to be changed yearly.

  • seems like C&C is basically not available, only 4 stores around australia seem to have stock for C&C :(. Anyone else coming across that?

    • managed to snag two of these, but C&C is from 2x different Sydney stores.

  • how often do filters need to be replaced?

    • From their manual FAQ:
      That’s easy! The purifier’s replacement indicators will notify you when it is
      time to replace the Carbon or HEPA filters, or the UV bulb.
      Plan on replacing the Carbon every 3-4 months, HEPA every 12-15 months,
      and UV bulb every 1-3 years.

      • 3-4 months!!

        • Well don't have such a dirty house you scutter

        • The outer filter is washable.

          The carbon filter costs $40 for a 3-pack.

  • These ones (like the high end Samsung ones, I think) use a UV-C light to kill germs etc that collect on the filter. The filter still will get physically clogged, but good to know that it's not growing bugs on the filter media. Only problem is the light needs to be replaced periodically.

  • My partner often complains of dog allergies, does anyone have any real-world experience of these helping with animal allergies?

    • Yes they absolutely do.

  • +2

    Can the uv-c light be turned off? Indoor UV-C can generate ozone and VOCs, which are not so great for your health.

    • +1

      Not always, and highly unlikely at low power draw situations.

      The above comment is kinda like saying sounds can cause deafness => always watch TV with the sound off and subtitles.

      • The point of using UV-C light is to inactivate pathogens in high risk environments. But UVC can also generate secondary VOCs and Ozone. The trade off between pathogen inactivation and generation of pollutants makes sense in high risk environments - does it make sense to introduce pollution, however small, into air where there is little risk of infection? Surely that's subjective?

        Also, if the power draw is low there's going to be very little disinfection in very fast moving air. What's the actual benefit there?

        • +1

          It's physics… And I believe the UV-C is activated on a specific cycle as a sterlisation process on the filters not for the fast moving air.

          You can make a UV-C lamp that produces no ozone. There's VOCs all over your house and photocatalytic conversion with UV is acuatally a way to remove/inactivate them - part of the reason for UV-ing the filter which may accumulate them. I'd be more concenred about concentrating VOCs in the filter without the UV. Which particular VOC are you concerned about a home air purifier producing and to what levels?

          • +4

            @nitens: I'm trying really hard to understand you guys but it's just going over my head

            • +1

              @smy: VOC = volatile orgainc compound. They're literally everywhere. Some are bad, some not so much. Some may be treated to deactivate them, sometimes this process can create other unwated byproducts that may be more toxic or dangerous than the VOC that was being treated for.

              Ozone isn't really likely to be a problem, and if you are really concerned you can buy a no ozone UV lamp replacement to be sure that this isn't a problem for the unit. Though if a home air purifier does produce ozone it's unlikely to be at sufficient rates to be of any serious concern unless your house is super sealed.

              Ultimately I think the addition of the UV is a bit gimmicky and isn't likely to offer any real benefit other than maybe making the filters less likely to grow mould and the like. However, unlike bargainshooter, I don't think there is a serious health concern to having it.

              • @nitens: Thank you, appreciate the explanation

    • +2

      There is a button to turn it off on my Z-3000.

  • +1

    dumb questions, i got the xiaomi air purifier, how much better is this one?

  • +3

    ordered one to keep as a backup plan just in case we see any bushfire smoke impact later this year

  • +1

    i owned 2 z1000 model, just find z1000 model at lowest fan speed too noisy… i also owned Beurer HEPA 13 Triple Filter Air Purifier - LR200 which is much quiet than z1000. not sure about z2000 noise

    • You are supposed to run them at maximum speed or not run them at all.

  • +1

    Anyone has any comment on this below purifier?

    https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B0BL9TVDHP
    $83.64AUD

    I can get 2 of these for the price of one TruSense.
    It also has WIFI connectivity.

  • +1

    I bought the Z-3000 during Prime Day for $189.16 as my first air purifier. I have a problem with allergy all my life and I find this thing very good.

    • was it ever $189?! I always thought that $249 was the historic low. Good price!

      • +3

        $174.45, June 1 2023

      • I was about to buy it for $249 but then I remembered that the next day is Prime Day so I told myself to wait a bit longer. It did went on sale and I bought it first thing in the morning.

  • I never heard of this brand. Where is it from ? China ?
    Compared to the Xiaomi purifier, which one is better ?

    • It's owned by ACCO so America? It's probably made in China but designed in America or something.

  • Does it help when it's hay fever season in Vic?

  • Does it has a sensor for PM10 ?

    • The 2000 and 3000 definitely do, but I don't think the 1000 does

  • -1

    Air purifiers……..build the solution, create a problem, then sell it.

    • +1

      So you're saying fire seasons are the problem created to sell air purifiers?

      • These are in homes throughout Sydney metro where I doubt you'll see many bushfires. Pretty sure they were championed by Pete Evans.

        • They might not see bushfires often, but I've lived in inner-city apartments and the amount of black stuff that accumulated around open windows was concerning.

  • +1

    Thx OP. Grabbed the last one in Chaddy.

  • Anyone has a screenshot of the coupon so I can buy in store?

    • You can do click & collect with the code.

      • No click collect available.

  • +2

    Also extra filters for the Z2000 on sale on Amazon rn for $49 (RRP is $79) https://amzn.asia/d/3G93x7s

  • Half the Clean Air Delivery Rate of Kmart's large version and more expensive. No thanks.

    • +1

      Looks like the KMart filters are also quite a lot cheaper 👍

  • Arovec is a pretty good one.

  • 28 Watt i.e. 20kWh/month if you run 24/7 less than 5$

    • +3

      So that's $60 annually plus 4 X $79 filters on top - at almost $400 per year, this thing has some serious running costs !!

      • -5

        yup, usual cheap buy in price dressed up as a "discount" when they fully know youre going to cough up big time on the back end. hopefully people did their research or saw this coming like some of us did when we got the JB Hifi "exclusive" (easy mark) email

        ive been sucking in atmosphere for 52 years (35 of that with added cigarette smoke)…no little plastic gadget is going to make any difference to mine, or anyone elses lungs, these are a solution looking for a problem…..

  • I looked it up in the April 2023 edition of Choice magazine and they didn't rate this very well at all. Probably why JBHiFi is trying to get rid of them at this price

  • +4

    @highon2str @phynicle @Chua32 @JeffOz Here are the screenshots from Choice April 2023. Sorry came up a bit blurry:

    Unfortunately this model (TruSens Z-2000) is at the bottom of the list. TruSense Z-3000 is rated higher though:

    https://files.ozbargain.com.au/upload/121422/105648/screensh…

    Recommended by Choice:

    https://files.ozbargain.com.au/upload/121422/105647/screensh…

    • +1

      thank you, appreciate the effort!

    • On that basis, the KMart unit is an absolute bargain at $159 ! It's smack in the middle of the pack, and almost every other unit there is double or triple the price.

      • We bought that Kmart unit but had to return it. May have got a faulty unit as it didn't make any difference during the bushfires.
        We replaced with the Xiaomi 4 compact which we are happy with.

  • This at $159.60 or Z-3000 at $239?
    From what I can find the difference is z3000 has a bigger room coverage.
    Thoughts?

    • Wait for Z-3000 to go on sale and get Z-3000.

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