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Fans come with a forward and a reverse setting. When you click it to "forward", the fan blows the air down. Standing under the fan, you will feel a breeze. When you click it to "reverse", the fan reverses rotation and blows the air up. Now, when you stand under the fan, you won't feel a breeze.

So, during the winter, turn the fan to "reverse" to circulate the warm air without blowing air down and cooling you in the process. Hot air rises and a ceiling fan, running in reverse, gently mixes the air.

During the summer, on the other hand, turn it to "forward" to create a wind-chill effect as the air moves against your skin and cools you.

So far, what I've said holds true for rooms with standard 8-foot ceilings. Fan companies recommend this procedure.

"Some people with higher ceilings, like a stairwell, often do the opposite of this. Cool air sinks to the floor, which causes the lower levels to be cooler and the upper levels hotter. So, in the summer, they run the fan in a blowing-up direction to keep cool air-conditioned air, which is coming out of their upstairs vents, upstairs where they want it.

In the winter, they run the fan in the blowing-down direction to move warm air into the lower levels of the house where they spend their time during the day. They feel no draft downstairs because they are too far away from the fan.

2006-08-04 18:50:44 · answer #1 · answered by hutson 7 · 1 0

The fan creates a toroidal cellular (donut) which the two rises or falls at as quickly as under the fan, and does the alternative against the encircling partitions. In summer season months, a ceiling fan can in basic terms supply alleviation with the aid of evaporative cooling, and then in basic terms whilst humidity is low. for this reason it is going to create optimum air velocity over the exterior of the consumer. If warmth is stratified, this won't produce lots alleviation. In iciness, the fan ought to bypass stratified warmth. lower back the warmth must be directed in direction of the consumer. the version in fan path would be counted on the geometry of the room and placement of the occupants. As others referred to, experimentation is the main suitable wager.

2016-10-01 12:07:06 · answer #2 · answered by damaris 4 · 0 0

Counter clockwise in the summer to pull air up and circulate it, clockwise in the winter to push the warm air down that rises.

2006-08-04 18:37:56 · answer #3 · answered by Lindsay M 5 · 0 0

it should be clockwise in the summer and counter clockwise in the winter. clockwise brings the air down and counter clockwise brings the air up. but if you have vents in the floor instead of the ceilng it could possibly be the other way around.

2006-08-04 18:31:35 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

in summer you want it to blow down and winter up to the cealing

2006-08-04 22:01:10 · answer #5 · answered by Bighorn 4 · 0 0

right to left

2006-08-04 18:23:28 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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