The differential pressure recorder trusted across containment-critical industries.
PressurePro is the differential pressure recorder of choice for professionals who can't afford to guess about containment — from mold remediation jobsites to hospital construction projects, the same defensible documentation requirement applies.
A differential pressure recorder isn't a single-industry tool. Mold remediation crews, water damage restoration contractors, healthcare construction teams, and asbestos abatement firms all face the same underlying problem: proving that negative pressure was maintained, when, and by how much.
Each industry below operates under its own standards body and regulatory framework. The documentation expectations differ in their specifics, but the equipment requirement is consistent — continuous, NIST-traceable, defensible pressure records. Select your work below to see how PressurePro fits.
Why the same differential pressure recorder works across industries
Containment standards vary by industry, but the underlying measurement does not. A negative pressure differential is a negative pressure differential, whether you're documenting a mold remediation chamber, an asbestos negative pressure enclosure, or an ICRA 2.0 Class V hospital containment.
PressurePro is engineered around the documentation requirements common to all of these: continuous logging, NIST-traceable accuracy, retention long enough to outlast claims and audits, and a printable record format the people reviewing your work actually accept.
The relevant standards bodies — the IICRC for restoration, OSHA for asbestos, and ASHE for healthcare — all publish the relevant regulatory text and guidance. The industry pages below summarize what each expects.
See full PressurePro specificationsDifferent standards. Same documentation requirement.
Every containment industry has its own regulatory framework, but every framework asks the same fundamental question: can you prove the pressure differential was maintained?
The number that matters
OSHA 1926.1101 requires a minimum of −0.02 inches of water column for asbestos negative pressure enclosures, verified by manometric measurement. Other standards reference similar thresholds.
Continuous documentation
A single measurement isn't documentation. Standards across industries require continuous monitoring — and the records to prove it.
Traceable accuracy
Regulators, insurance carriers, and auditors want to know the measurement is defensible. NIST traceability is the answer in every industry.
Find PressurePro for your industry.
See the differential pressure recorder built for containment professionals, or talk to our team about your specific industry requirements.