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#1
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It's HOT, so I thought run the ceiling fan so the cool air comes across
the stone flooring and moves by me to be sucked up into the ceiling fan - so I feel cooler. Fan is set to move air UP Earlier I thought run the fan directly onto me gently moving air straight at me, which is DOWN. But when I did that, after 10-15min felt hotter in the room. Just saw one of those home shows, says in winter run the fan to move air UP so the hot air moves along the ceiling and down your walls. And, in the summer run your fan DOWN, with NO explanation, except claiming that lowers your temperature 4-5 degrees [which is impossible in a CLOSED system] and save up to 40% on air conditioning [what planet do THEY live on?] So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? |
#2
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![]() "RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() It's HOT, so I thought run the ceiling fan so the cool air comes across the stone flooring and moves by me to be sucked up into the ceiling fan - so I feel cooler. Fan is set to move air UP Earlier I thought run the fan directly onto me gently moving air straight at me, which is DOWN. But when I did that, after 10-15min felt hotter in the room. Just saw one of those home shows, says in winter run the fan to move air UP so the hot air moves along the ceiling and down your walls. And, in the summer run your fan DOWN, with NO explanation, except claiming that lowers your temperature 4-5 degrees [which is impossible in a CLOSED system] and save up to 40% on air conditioning [what planet do THEY live on?] So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? it depends if you have air conditioning. |
#3
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:29:47 -0700, Pico Rico
wrote: "RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() ...snip... So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? it depends if you have air conditioning. again which way? for what reason? elaborate? |
#4
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![]() "RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:29:47 -0700, Pico Rico wrote: "RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() ...snip... So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? it depends if you have air conditioning. again which way? for what reason? elaborate? heat rises. If you have ac, you want to push the warm air down so it can become ac'd. If you don't have ac, you might as well leave the warm air up there were it will be less noticed. |
#5
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On Thu, 3 Jul 2014 17:00:16 -0700, "Pico Rico"
wrote: "RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:29:47 -0700, Pico Rico wrote: "RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() ...snip... So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? it depends if you have air conditioning. again which way? for what reason? elaborate? heat rises. If you have ac, you want to push the warm air down so it can become ac'd. If you don't have ac, you might as well leave the warm air up there were it will be less noticed. But you can cool to a higher temperature if you help the convection off your skin. Add in evaporative cooling and a breeze is a big win, at least in small rooms, like a home. |
#6
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 22:28:23 -0400, krw wrote:
On Thu, 3 Jul 2014 17:00:16 -0700, "Pico Rico" wrote: "RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:29:47 -0700, Pico Rico wrote: "RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() ...snip... So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? it depends if you have air conditioning. again which way? for what reason? elaborate? heat rises. If you have ac, you want to push the warm air down so it can become ac'd. If you don't have ac, you might as well leave the warm air up there were it will be less noticed. But you can cool to a higher temperature if you help the convection off your skin. Add in evaporative cooling and a breeze is a big win, at least in small rooms, like a home. We have air conditioning which keeps the house at 78, and a way undersized room dehumidifier which we set up in the master shower, turn on the circulating fan in the furnace, and basically slowly and inefficiently dry out the whole house. It makes a huge huge difference how hot it feels -- and we're in Oregon, where everyone is a humidity wimp. -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com |
#7
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:27:29 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote: It's HOT, so I thought run the ceiling fan so the cool air comes across the stone flooring and moves by me to be sucked up into the ceiling fan - so I feel cooler. Fan is set to move air UP Earlier I thought run the fan directly onto me gently moving air straight at me, which is DOWN. But when I did that, after 10-15min felt hotter in the room. Just saw one of those home shows, says in winter run the fan to move air UP so the hot air moves along the ceiling and down your walls. And, in the summer run your fan DOWN, with NO explanation, except claiming that lowers your temperature 4-5 degrees [which is impossible in a CLOSED system] and save up to 40% on air conditioning [what planet do THEY live on?] So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. ...Jim Thompson -- | James E.Thompson | mens | | Analog Innovations | et | | Analog/Mixed-Signal ASIC's and Discrete Systems | manus | | San Tan Valley, AZ 85142 Skype: skypeanalog | | | Voice ![]() | E-mail Icon at http://www.analog-innovations.com | 1962 | I love to cook with wine. Sometimes I even put it in the food. |
#8
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:32:58 -0700, Jim Thompson
wrote: ...snip... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. ...Jim Thompson EXACTLY! In the summer cooler, in the winter the hot ceiling air does get a chance to slide down the cooler external wall, heating them a bit. ....I'm going to go change them all back. Experts! phewey! |
#9
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On 04/07/14 07:38, RobertMacy wrote:
On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:32:58 -0700, Jim Thompson wrote: ...snip... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. ...Jim Thompson EXACTLY! In the summer cooler, in the winter the hot ceiling air does get a chance to slide down the cooler external wall, heating them a bit. ...I'm going to go change them all back. Experts! phewey! The idea of a direct draft downwards is to make you feel cooler due to the evaporation of your perspiration, why not make up your own mind and use whatever feels the best. |
#10
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:38:12 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:32:58 -0700, Jim Thompson wrote: ...snip... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. ...Jim Thompson EXACTLY! In the summer cooler, in the winter the hot ceiling air does get a chance to slide down the cooler external wall, heating them a bit. ...I'm going to go change them all back. Experts! phewey! The theory is to move the hot air from the ceiling down to the living space in the winter. Depending the use of the space, summer may require up or down. If air conditioned you can get away with keeping temps at least 4 degrees warmer if you keep the fan running down because the light breeze helps cool. Running the fan UP draws the cool air from the floor up to the ceiling and circulates the air across the ceiling to spill down the walls. Doesn't work as well with "architectural" ceilings. I just put 2 70 inch fans in the office - 6 speed - running down on 4th speed -13 and 15 foot ceilings with architectural features - (former theatre) |
#11
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 18:18:43 -0700, wrote:
...snip.... space in the winter. Depending the use of the space, summer may require up or down. If air conditioned you can get away with keeping temps at least 4 degrees warmer if you keep the fan running down because the light breeze helps cool. Running the fan UP draws the cool air from the floor up to the ceiling and circulates the air across the ceiling to spill down the walls. Doesn't work as well with "architectural" ceilings. I just put 2 70 inch fans in the office - 6 speed - running down on 4th speed -13 and 15 foot ceilings with architectural features - (former theatre) wow, sounds neat! just got done with a 'side by side' comparison; DOWN is HOTTER than no fan! even though the air hits you more directly just seems to become hot air. UP is COOLER than no fan! keep getting cold drafts from every side. well 'cool' drafts. |
#12
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 18:29:46 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 18:18:43 -0700, wrote: ...snip.... space in the winter. Depending the use of the space, summer may require up or down. If air conditioned you can get away with keeping temps at least 4 degrees warmer if you keep the fan running down because the light breeze helps cool. Running the fan UP draws the cool air from the floor up to the ceiling and circulates the air across the ceiling to spill down the walls. Doesn't work as well with "architectural" ceilings. I just put 2 70 inch fans in the office - 6 speed - running down on 4th speed -13 and 15 foot ceilings with architectural features - (former theatre) wow, sounds neat! just got done with a 'side by side' comparison; DOWN is HOTTER than no fan! even though the air hits you more directly just seems to become hot air. UP is COOLER than no fan! keep getting cold drafts from every side. well 'cool' drafts. Air conditioned, or not?? In the "theatre" we were able to crank the AC up 4 degrees C without people complaining of heat, and the "upper deck" area is now cool instead of toasty. (about 1/3 of the "theatre" is about 16" higher (floor) than the rest - with level ceiling. Originally was 3 levels, 1/3 low, 1/3 up one step, and 1/3 up another step. A few of the girls should wear more clothes - they complain their legs get cold. |
#13
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Jim Thompson wrote:
On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:27:29 -0700, RobertMacy wrote: It's HOT, so I thought run the ceiling fan so the cool air comes across the stone flooring and moves by me to be sucked up into the ceiling fan - so I feel cooler. Fan is set to move air UP Earlier I thought run the fan directly onto me gently moving air straight at me, which is DOWN. But when I did that, after 10-15min felt hotter in the room. Just saw one of those home shows, says in winter run the fan to move air UP so the hot air moves along the ceiling and down your walls. And, in the summer run your fan DOWN, with NO explanation, except claiming that lowers your temperature 4-5 degrees [which is impossible in a CLOSED system] and save up to 40% on air conditioning [what planet do THEY live on?] So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. Yup. Same here. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#14
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:44:53 -0700, Joerg wrote:
Jim Thompson wrote: ...snip.... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. Yup. Same here. THANKS, again empirical evidence opposite the 'experts'! |
#15
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On 7/3/2014 7:53 PM, RobertMacy wrote:
On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:44:53 -0700, Joerg wrote: Jim Thompson wrote: ...snip.... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. Yup. Same here. THANKS, again empirical evidence opposite the 'experts'! Wow, you seem to have a problem with authority. Of course you can use the fan anyway you wish. The recommendation has nothing to do with your house, it has to do with your skin. As others have pointed out when it is warm a slight breeze can feel good, so the fan is set to blow down so you can feel it. In the winter when it is cool you don't want to feel the breeze, so set it to up. By the time the circulation reaches you it is greatly dispersed and you don't feel the cool air so much. My bed is right under a window and I tried adding a plastic film to seal off the draft. But that only worked so well. I tried adding some cardboard as layers of insulation behind the blind and still felt a cold draft. Turns out I was reducing the heat flow through the window, but that was not the full problem. The air by the window would still get cold, but since it got cold slowly it fell slowly still lowering temperature significantly by the time it fell on my bed. It took a 3/4 inch sheet of Styrofoam tightly fitted to the window before I could sleep in that bed. This was a cold winter here and that draft was unbearable! It only takes a very little air flow to create a very noticeable draft in the winter because the air can be rather cold. That is why you want the fan blowing up if at all in the winter. I turn mine off in the winter. I don't think it changes the electric bill noticeably one way or the other or the comfort in the room. -- Rick |
#16
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 17:54:04 -0700, rickman wrote:
...snip... Wow, you seem to have a problem with authority. Of course you can use the fan anyway you wish. Problem with authority? Maybe, but it was a LEARNED response. Actually, I was trying to confirm whether others experienced what I had found empirically, and was in direct opposition to the 'experts' suggestion. Plus, convince Ms. Macy that I am NOT an idiot and delusional for thinking I know more than the experts on these House shows. The recommendation has nothing to do with your house, it has to do with your skin. As others have pointed out when it is warm a slight breeze can feel good, so the fan is set to blow down so you can feel it. In the winter when it is cool you don't want to feel the breeze, so set it to up. By the time the circulation reaches you it is greatly dispersed and you don't feel the cool air so much. I thought that way too, directly blowing down onto me in hot weather 'sounded' better. But just confirmed that blowing down on me ended up 'feeling' a good 5 degrees hotter, than letting air come in from the sides. I now have the fan set for UP and it feels cooler in the room than with NO fan. And earlier it definitely felt hotter with the fan blowing DOWN, by several degrees above what it was like with NO fam. My bed is right under a window and I tried adding a plastic film to seal off the draft. But that only worked so well. I tried adding some cardboard as layers of insulation behind the blind and still felt a cold draft. Turns out I was reducing the heat flow through the window, but that was not the full problem. The air by the window would still get cold, but since it got cold slowly it fell slowly still lowering temperature significantly by the time it fell on my bed. It took a 3/4 inch sheet of Styrofoam tightly fitted to the window before I could sleep in that bed. This was a cold winter here and that draft was unbearable! It only takes a very little air flow to create a very noticeable draft in the winter because the air can be rather cold. That is why you want the fan blowing up if at all in the winter. I turn mine off in the winter. I don't think it changes the electric bill noticeably one way or the other or the comfort in the room. At University I had a roomate who during the summer would go logging for piece meal wages to make great money. He said they roasted all day, like into the 80's, 90's, and froze at night in their cabins. Wake up in the morning to find a sheet of ice frozen over standing water in any dish! Now THAT's cold. He said the money was worth it, though. |
#17
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On 7/3/2014 7:53 PM, RobertMacy wrote:
On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:44:53 -0700, Joerg wrote: Jim Thompson wrote: ...snip.... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. Yup. Same here. THANKS, again empirical evidence opposite the 'experts'! Consulting the works of Aristotle, Confucious, and Ann Landers..... provides a variety of data. Try one, try the other. Do what works for you. -- .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. |
#18
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On Fri, 04 Jul 2014 02:11:00 -0400, Stormin Mormon
Gave us: On 7/3/2014 7:53 PM, RobertMacy wrote: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:44:53 -0700, Joerg wrote: Jim Thompson wrote: ...snip.... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. Yup. Same here. THANKS, again empirical evidence opposite the 'experts'! Consulting the works of Aristotle, Confucious, and Ann Landers..... provides a variety of data. Try one, try the other. Do what works for you. Great answer. The thread could have turned philosophical even sooner. Do not forget Tzu. |
#19
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"RobertMacy" wrote in message
news ![]() On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:44:53 -0700, Joerg wrote: Jim Thompson wrote: ...snip.... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. Yup. Same here. THANKS, again empirical evidence opposite the 'experts'! Perhaps it depends upon the climate. I've lived in tropical climates most of my life. I've used ceiling fans for decades, long before they were popular or even commonly available. At the same time, central air conditioning in homes was very uncommon; even room air conditoners. My fans ran down, May through October (the other months were cool enough so that they weren't needed). We now have central air but it is rarely used . It is rarely used because we like open windows and don't often need it. Why don't we need it? BECAUSE THE FANS RUN DOWN. -- dadiOH ____________________________ Winters getting colder? Tired of the rat race? Taxes out of hand? Maybe just ready for a change? Check it out... http://www.floridaloghouse.net |
#20
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dadiOH wrote:
"RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:44:53 -0700, Joerg wrote: Jim Thompson wrote: ...snip.... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. Yup. Same here. THANKS, again empirical evidence opposite the 'experts'! Perhaps it depends upon the climate. I've lived in tropical climates most of my life. I've used ceiling fans for decades, long before they were popular or even commonly available. Unlikely, unless you are 130 years old. In restaurants or even some upscale southern homes they had such fans back then. Often multiple units driven by a common motor and belts. They had less than the usual five blades of modern versions but they sure were ceiling fans. Even today's style showed up in the stores over 100 years ago: http://www.vintagefans.com/gallery/c...eilingfan.html Ours doesn't look much different except that it has five blades. [...] -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#21
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:53:12 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:44:53 -0700, Joerg wrote: Jim Thompson wrote: ...snip.... I run UP all seasons.... moves the air within putting myself in a wind. Yup. Same here. THANKS, again empirical evidence opposite the 'experts'! "ex spurt" or sales critter? A lot of sales critters act as if "expert" to upsell to higher margin products. ?-) |
#22
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:27:29 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote: It's HOT, so I thought run the ceiling fan so the cool air comes across the stone flooring and moves by me to be sucked up into the ceiling fan - so I feel cooler. Fan is set to move air UP Earlier I thought run the fan directly onto me gently moving air straight at me, which is DOWN. But when I did that, after 10-15min felt hotter in the room. Just saw one of those home shows, says in winter run the fan to move air UP so the hot air moves along the ceiling and down your walls. And, in the summer run your fan DOWN, with NO explanation, except claiming that lowers your temperature 4-5 degrees [which is impossible in a CLOSED system] and save up to 40% on air conditioning [what planet do THEY live on?] So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. -- John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com http://www.highlandtechnology.com |
#23
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin
wrote: ...snip.... Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. AZ housing is noted for these fans. We have eight laced throughout the house. Three speed settings, two chains, one for fan one for light, and always two switches on the walls for each fan, and a 'direction switch' on the side of the housing, requires a ladder to get to that is very intelligently mnemonic, slide up air moves UP, slide down air moves DOWN. noiseless critters, too. |
#24
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:50:22 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin wrote: ...snip.... Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. AZ housing is noted for these fans. We have eight laced throughout the house. Three speed settings, two chains, one for fan one for light, and always two switches on the walls for each fan, and a 'direction switch' on the side of the housing, requires a ladder to get to that is very intelligently mnemonic, slide up air moves UP, slide down air moves DOWN. noiseless critters, too. Mine cost $40 at Home Depot and doesn't have all those fancy features; 3 speeds, no light, no direction. It is quiet. In our climate, we probably use it 5 or 10 nights per year, for the rare heat wave. Ceiling fans are impressive. They seem to last forever. I did tie it into the ceiling real good. Nothing wrecks your sleep like a fan falling on you. -- John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com http://www.highlandtechnology.com |
#25
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 17:11:23 -0700, John Larkin
wrote: ...snip... I did tie it into the ceiling real good. Nothing wrecks your sleep like a fan falling on you. These fans are probably a bit more. you just reminded me that UP air is going to turn the fan into a chopper if accidently raise up into it! |
#26
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![]() Mine cost $40 at Home Depot and doesn't have all those fancy features; 3 speeds, no light, no direction. It is quiet. In our climate, we probably use it 5 or 10 nights per year, for the rare heat wave. Ceiling fans are impressive. They seem to last forever. I did tie it into the ceiling real good. Nothing wrecks your sleep like a fan falling on you. Hi, Sounds like you have an experience with falling ceiling fan on you? I have 3 of them fancy ones on top floor of the house. Very seldom use them. Today it is VERY hot(for us at least), 30.7C in my front yard. 30C temp. here is not usual. Rather -30C is usual in winter, LOL! |
#27
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On 7/3/2014 8:42 PM, Tony Hwang wrote:
Mine cost $40 at Home Depot and doesn't have all those fancy features; 3 speeds, no light, no direction. It is quiet. In our climate, we probably use it 5 or 10 nights per year, for the rare heat wave. Ceiling fans are impressive. They seem to last forever. I did tie it into the ceiling real good. Nothing wrecks your sleep like a fan falling on you. Hi, Sounds like you have an experience with falling ceiling fan on you? I have 3 of them fancy ones on top floor of the house. Very seldom use them. Today it is VERY hot(for us at least), 30.7C in my front yard. 30C temp. here is not usual. Rather -30C is usual in winter, LOL! 30°C doesn't sound so bad to me. I like the 30°C days. It is the 33°C days like we've been having when it starts to be a bother. This weekend should be nice though. High around 30°C, low around 14°C at night. Nice sleeping weather. -- Rick |
#28
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On 2014-07-04, John Larkin wrote:
Ceiling fans are impressive. They seem to last forever. it's an induction motor. the only wear part in the bearings and it rotates slowly compared to most other motors. -- umop apisdn --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#29
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:50:22 -0700, RobertMacy
wrote: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin wrote: ...snip.... Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. AZ housing is noted for these fans. We have eight laced throughout the house. Three speed settings, two chains, one for fan one for light, and always two switches on the walls for each fan, and a 'direction switch' on the side of the housing, requires a ladder to get to that is very intelligently mnemonic, slide up air moves UP, slide down air moves DOWN. noiseless critters, too. Ours have pull-chains for both switches (even though all but one have two wall switches, and that one has two switches but only one is connected for some reason). |
#30
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"RobertMacy" wrote in message
news ![]() On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin wrote: ...snip.... Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. AZ housing is noted for these fans. There's your answer as to why blowing down doesn't cool you. Nobody sweats in Arizona...no sweat, no evaporation. -- dadiOH ____________________________ Winters getting colder? Tired of the rat race? Taxes out of hand? Maybe just ready for a change? Check it out... http://www.floridaloghouse.net |
#31
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On 07/04/2014 08:20 AM, dadiOH wrote:
"RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin wrote: ...snip.... Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. AZ housing is noted for these fans. There's your answer as to why blowing down doesn't cool you. Nobody sweats in Arizona...no sweat, no evaporation. Somebody slept through science class. |
#32
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On Fri, 04 Jul 2014 06:16:50 -0700, V Ague wrote:
On 07/04/2014 08:20 AM, dadiOH wrote: ...snip.... There's your answer as to why blowing down doesn't cool you. Nobody sweats in Arizona...no sweat, no evaporation. Somebody slept through science class. I took him to mean "Nobody sweats in Arizona..." a bit more tongue in cheek, because we're allowed to carry in this state. |
#33
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Posted to alt.home.repair,sci.electronics.design
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On Fri, 4 Jul 2014 08:20:30 -0400, "dadiOH" wrote:
"RobertMacy" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin wrote: ...snip.... Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. AZ housing is noted for these fans. There's your answer as to why blowing down doesn't cool you. Nobody sweats in Arizona...no sweat, no evaporation. But a down-pointing fan does blow the dust off. http://www.myfoxdc.com/story/2594122...ights-grounded -- John Larkin Highland Technology Inc www.highlandtechnology.com jlarkin at highlandtechnology dot com Precision electronic instrumentation |
#34
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Posted to alt.home.repair,sci.electronics.design
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On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin
Gave us: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:27:29 -0700, RobertMacy wrote: It's HOT, so I thought run the ceiling fan so the cool air comes across the stone flooring and moves by me to be sucked up into the ceiling fan - so I feel cooler. Fan is set to move air UP Earlier I thought run the fan directly onto me gently moving air straight at me, which is DOWN. But when I did that, after 10-15min felt hotter in the room. Just saw one of those home shows, says in winter run the fan to move air UP so the hot air moves along the ceiling and down your walls. And, in the summer run your fan DOWN, with NO explanation, except claiming that lowers your temperature 4-5 degrees [which is impossible in a CLOSED system] and save up to 40% on air conditioning [what planet do THEY live on?] So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. What brand of fan did you buy that it does not reverse? That is silly. And if you installed it, why would you install a fan that is so sub-par? There cannot be that great a savings between them, even if such fans enjoy a market. Maybe I never looked for them, but an air circulator fan (ceiling fan)always has a bi-directional motor. And if it came with the house, I would be looking to kick a contractor's ass, especially in *that* town. I didn't think anything up there was done '**** poor'. Or maybe you never actually inspected the fan itself. |
#35
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On Fri, 04 Jul 2014 19:01:04 -0700, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno
wrote: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin Gave us: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:27:29 -0700, RobertMacy wrote: It's HOT, so I thought run the ceiling fan so the cool air comes across the stone flooring and moves by me to be sucked up into the ceiling fan - so I feel cooler. Fan is set to move air UP Earlier I thought run the fan directly onto me gently moving air straight at me, which is DOWN. But when I did that, after 10-15min felt hotter in the room. Just saw one of those home shows, says in winter run the fan to move air UP so the hot air moves along the ceiling and down your walls. And, in the summer run your fan DOWN, with NO explanation, except claiming that lowers your temperature 4-5 degrees [which is impossible in a CLOSED system] and save up to 40% on air conditioning [what planet do THEY live on?] So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. What brand of fan did you buy that it does not reverse? That is silly. And if you installed it, why would you install a fan that is so sub-par? There cannot be that great a savings between them, even if such fans enjoy a market. Maybe I never looked for them, but an air circulator fan (ceiling fan)always has a bi-directional motor. And if it came with the house, I would be looking to kick a contractor's ass, especially in *that* town. I didn't think anything up there was done '**** poor'. Or maybe you never actually inspected the fan itself. There are lots of cheap uni-directional fans on the market. $19.95 China specials. Usually only in white, but likely others out there. |
#36
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#38
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Posted to alt.home.repair,sci.electronics.design
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On Fri, 04 Jul 2014 19:01:04 -0700, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno
wrote: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin Gave us: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:27:29 -0700, RobertMacy wrote: It's HOT, so I thought run the ceiling fan so the cool air comes across the stone flooring and moves by me to be sucked up into the ceiling fan - so I feel cooler. Fan is set to move air UP Earlier I thought run the fan directly onto me gently moving air straight at me, which is DOWN. But when I did that, after 10-15min felt hotter in the room. Just saw one of those home shows, says in winter run the fan to move air UP so the hot air moves along the ceiling and down your walls. And, in the summer run your fan DOWN, with NO explanation, except claiming that lowers your temperature 4-5 degrees [which is impossible in a CLOSED system] and save up to 40% on air conditioning [what planet do THEY live on?] So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. What brand of fan did you buy that it does not reverse? Can't recall. $40 at Home Depot. Works great. That is silly. And if you installed it, why would you install a fan that is so sub-par? It moves air nicely, looks good, and it's well balanced and quiet. Nothing sub-par in sight. There cannot be that great a savings between them, even if such fans enjoy a market. Maybe I never looked for them, but an air circulator fan (ceiling fan)always has a bi-directional motor. And if it came with the house, I would be looking to kick a contractor's ass, especially in *that* town. I didn't think anything up there was done '**** poor'. Or maybe you never actually inspected the fan itself. I bought it and installed it. We use it maybe 5 nights a year, when it's hot in San Francisco, which is rarely is. We passed a big billboard this morning, downtown, right beside highway 101. It must cost a fortune. It's by Nest, the thermostat people. It says, as I recall, "San Francisco, get a NEST thermostat and save on your summer heating bill." |
#39
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Posted to alt.home.repair,sci.electronics.design
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On Fri, 04 Jul 2014 23:00:21 -0700, John Larkin
wrote: On Fri, 04 Jul 2014 19:01:04 -0700, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno wrote: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:39:33 -0700, John Larkin Gave us: On Thu, 03 Jul 2014 16:27:29 -0700, RobertMacy wrote: It's HOT, so I thought run the ceiling fan so the cool air comes across the stone flooring and moves by me to be sucked up into the ceiling fan - so I feel cooler. Fan is set to move air UP Earlier I thought run the fan directly onto me gently moving air straight at me, which is DOWN. But when I did that, after 10-15min felt hotter in the room. Just saw one of those home shows, says in winter run the fan to move air UP so the hot air moves along the ceiling and down your walls. And, in the summer run your fan DOWN, with NO explanation, except claiming that lowers your temperature 4-5 degrees [which is impossible in a CLOSED system] and save up to 40% on air conditioning [what planet do THEY live on?] So my question is WHICH way is this !@#$#@ system designed for? UP or DOWN air in the summer? Mine doesn't reverse, it always blows down. I don't think the blades can be switched. We don't have a/c, so the only time we use the fan is when it's warm at night. Works great. What brand of fan did you buy that it does not reverse? Can't recall. $40 at Home Depot. Works great. That is silly. And if you installed it, why would you install a fan that is so sub-par? It moves air nicely, looks good, and it's well balanced and quiet. Nothing sub-par in sight. There cannot be that great a savings between them, even if such fans enjoy a market. Maybe I never looked for them, but an air circulator fan (ceiling fan)always has a bi-directional motor. And if it came with the house, I would be looking to kick a contractor's ass, especially in *that* town. I didn't think anything up there was done '**** poor'. Or maybe you never actually inspected the fan itself. I bought it and installed it. We use it maybe 5 nights a year, when it's hot in San Francisco, which is rarely is. We passed a big billboard this morning, downtown, right beside highway 101. It must cost a fortune. It's by Nest, the thermostat people. It says, as I recall, "San Francisco, get a NEST thermostat and save on your summer heating bill." Hey, it's famous already: http://nancyfriedman.typepad.com/.a/...d2218a2970b-pi |
#40
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Posted to alt.home.repair,sci.electronics.design
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"John Larkin" wrote in message
We passed a big billboard this morning, downtown, right beside highway 101. It must cost a fortune. It's by Nest, the thermostat people. It says, as I recall, "San Francisco, get a NEST thermostat and save on your summer heating bill." ![]() I used to get to SF 2-4 times a year, usually between October to May. I tried to avoid July, BITTER cold! My first experience with SF "summer" was in July, 1952. I was in the navy, waiting to be shipped to Hawaii. There used to be a jazz club on Geary just off Powell called - IIRC - Club Hangover. To this day, I remember turning the corner off Powell and being met with a blast of arctic air. DAMP arctic air. -- dadiOH ____________________________ Winters getting colder? Tired of the rat race? Taxes out of hand? Maybe just ready for a change? Check it out... http://www.floridaloghouse.net |
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