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Shaman683
 
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Default Fried Fan?

It's been real hot in my old house during this heat wave, so I leave my
pedastel mounted electric fan on and the AC off when I go to work.

When I got home last night, my fan had quit.
It was plugged in OK, and it was still turned on to slow speed.

The plastic motor housing was a little warm, but not dangerously so.

Today, I put a new electric plug on it, but iit appears that wasn't the
problem.

I bought the fan at the Dollar Store about three years ago, and it's
been a little dandy, but she's dead now.

I need some guidance on troubleshooting please.

Thank you!

--Skip

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Al Bundy
 
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Default



Shaman683 wrote:
It's been real hot in my old house during this heat wave, so I leave my
pedastel mounted electric fan on and the AC off when I go to work.

When I got home last night, my fan had quit.
It was plugged in OK, and it was still turned on to slow speed.

The plastic motor housing was a little warm, but not dangerously so.

Today, I put a new electric plug on it, but iit appears that wasn't the
problem.

I bought the fan at the Dollar Store about three years ago, and it's
been a little dandy, but she's dead now.

I need some guidance on troubleshooting please.

Thank you!

--Skip

Well, you got your money's worth already anyway.
The fan shaft might have seized from lack of oil. Bet you did not oil
the motor in those three years. Good maintenance with your usage would
be yearly. You could take it apart, clean up the shaft, oil it and try
it again. But first, rotate the fan blade (motor unplugged) by hand. If
it moves freely then a stuch shaft is not the problem. If the blade
stops as soon as you take your hand off then it is seized and you might
have a chance.
Changing the plug on a whim or guess shows that you maybe should just
head to the dollar store. If they have a VOM there, buy one.

  #3   Report Post  
Dan C
 
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Default

On Wed, 27 Jul 2005 01:18:08 -0700, Shaman683 wrote:

I bought the fan at the Dollar Store about three years ago, and it's
been a little dandy, but she's dead now.

I need some guidance on troubleshooting please.


Put the fan in the nearest dumpster, climb on your bicycle, and head to
the dollar store.

--
If you're not on the edge, you're taking up too much space.
Linux Registered User #327951

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Joseph Meehan
 
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Shaman683 wrote:
It's been real hot in my old house during this heat wave, so I leave
my pedastel mounted electric fan on and the AC off when I go to work.


Do you open the windows and use the fan to blow air out or in a window?
If no you are only making it hotter inside. The fan will consume
electricity and that will all turn to heat inside you home. Fans don't cool
the air, they only make you feel cooler because the air is moving. When you
are not there it does no good.


When I got home last night, my fan had quit.
It was plugged in OK, and it was still turned on to slow speed.

The plastic motor housing was a little warm, but not dangerously so.

Today, I put a new electric plug on it, but iit appears that wasn't
the problem.

I bought the fan at the Dollar Store about three years ago, and it's
been a little dandy, but she's dead now.

I need some guidance on troubleshooting please.


Easy, trash the one you have and buy a new one. They are not really
designed to be repaired.



Thank you!

--Skip


--
Joseph Meehan

Dia duit


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meirman
 
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Default

In alt.home.repair on Wed, 27 Jul 2005 13:14:45 GMT "Joseph Meehan"
posted:


Shaman683 wrote:
It's been real hot in my old house during this heat wave, so I leave
my pedastel mounted electric fan on and the AC off when I go to work.


Do you open the windows and use the fan to blow air out or in a window?
If no you are only making it hotter inside. The fan will consume
electricity and that will all turn to heat inside you home. Fans don't cool
the air, they only make you feel cooler because the air is moving. When you
are not there it does no good.


You said it better than I could. It's amazing how many people miss
this point.

It's a loser all around. OP, you're wasting electricity, you're
wasting the fuel they use to make the electricity, and you're heating
your house.

But I'm proud of you for turning off your AC. That uses more
electricity and some don't even turn it off.


Meirman
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or not you are posting the same letter.
Change domain to erols.com, if necessary.


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Jmagerl
 
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I had a fan that I loved very much too. Made by Panasonic who no longer
makes them. But after 3 years it stopped turning also. I used gumout to
clean the bearings and than reoiled and she was as good as new (until my kid
knocked it off the table and broke the blade).

Unfortunately, a can of Gumout will cost more than going to the dollar store
and buying a new fan.

"Shaman683" wrote in message
oups.com...
It's been real hot in my old house during this heat wave, so I leave my
pedastel mounted electric fan on and the AC off when I go to work.

When I got home last night, my fan had quit.
It was plugged in OK, and it was still turned on to slow speed.

The plastic motor housing was a little warm, but not dangerously so.

Today, I put a new electric plug on it, but iit appears that wasn't the
problem.

I bought the fan at the Dollar Store about three years ago, and it's
been a little dandy, but she's dead now.

I need some guidance on troubleshooting please.

Thank you!

--Skip



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meirman
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In alt.home.repair on Wed, 27 Jul 2005 11:28:01 -0500 "Jmagerl"
posted:

I had a fan that I loved very much too. Made by Panasonic who no longer
makes them. But after 3 years it stopped turning also. I used gumout to
clean the bearings and than reoiled and she was as good as new (until my kid
knocked it off the table and broke the blade).

Unfortunately, a can of Gumout will cost more than going to the dollar store
and buying a new fan.


Yeah, but everyone should have a can of Gumout anyhow. It gets the
gum out.

If the can costs 3 dollars, it takes maybe 3 cents worth to loosen
things.

I don't know which would work better, Gumout or Liquid Wrench or one
of the other competitors.

I have a fan that must have been at one time riveted to some machine
in some factory. It's topheavy and if I hit it at all, it falls over.

But it's the only one whose base is small enough to sit on my window
sill, above my bed. So I used one nail to nail it to the sill.

It starts to slow down or to give a low squeak after no more than 3
months. But it can be as little as a week. This year it was 2
months. I don't clean it; I just oil it, takes 3 minutes, but it's
pretty clear the space between the shaft and the bearings is greater
than in most fans. This one might be 50 years old (though I've only
had it 15.) The bearings are very accessible, but the front one is a
little harder to do since I keep the fan nailed to the sill. It has
no plastic cover, just a metal motor, mounted to the stand at one
side, and a blade and little grill on the shaft.

I'm lucky with this one. If it stalls, it gets hot of course, but
never burning hot, and it always runs as good as it did after oiling.

Like with all my fans, all of them table fans, I have an external
speed control. Most of them, including this one, can use a table light
dimmer with no problem. (If not, I take a fan control and mount it in
some sort of plastic box.) I also took a thermostat out of a broken
fan, mouted it in the plastic cap of an aerosol can, and have the fan
turn off if it gets too cold in the night.


"Shaman683" wrote in message
roups.com...
It's been real hot in my old house during this heat wave, so I leave my
pedastel mounted electric fan on and the AC off when I go to work.

When I got home last night, my fan had quit.
It was plugged in OK, and it was still turned on to slow speed.

The plastic motor housing was a little warm, but not dangerously so.

Today, I put a new electric plug on it, but iit appears that wasn't the
problem.

I bought the fan at the Dollar Store about three years ago, and it's
been a little dandy, but she's dead now.

I need some guidance on troubleshooting please.

Thank you!

--Skip




Meirman
--
If emailing, please let me know whether
or not you are posting the same letter.
Change domain to erols.com, if necessary.
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