Set it on low blowing up and it'll move the hot air down the walls and into the room, hot air stays at the ceiling.
2006-11-13 02:27:59
·
answer #1
·
answered by Sean 7
·
0⤊
1⤋
First, make sure your fan has no dust on it otherwise, when you reverse it, the dust will go everywhere. If you're standing under the fan and feel a strong breeze, that's for the summer, change the switch and you're in winter mode.
Most ceiling fans are reversible. If you have a switch on the bottom of your fan, that means your fan is reversible. In the winter, it is best to direct the air flow upward — in a counter-clockwise rotation. This can be accomplished by placing the fan’s switch in the top position. The reason for this direction is that for comfort, it is best to prevent the hotter air from collecting at the top of the ceiling. The fan will draw cold air from the bottom of the room and force it upward, mixing with the hotter air. The air will then be pushed down the sides of the room into the living zone, making the room feel warmer.
In the summer, the switch should be in the down position — in a clockwise rotation. This will push the air downward, causing a wind-chill effect.
Ceiling fans create a wind-chill effect that makes rooms feel cooler than they actually are. Although ceiling fans cost only about a penny an hour to operate, they should be turned off in unoccupied rooms. Fans are for people, not rooms, and you won’t get the benefit if you’re not in the room.
In the summer, fans should be set so you can feel a breeze. This typically means the switch located on the bottom of the fan is in the down position, which should make the fan blades rotate clockwise. If you don’t feel the fan’s breeze, then the switch is probably in the winter position. For maximum efficiency, keep the fan blades at least 18 inches from walls.
Tips for Winter
In the winter, reverse the rotation of your ceiling fans to lift cool air and move warm air across the ceiling and down the walls into the living zone. The fan will bring the hot air down to mix with the cooler air at floor level. This mixing will basically equalize the temperature at floor and ceiling levels, which means that the heat will not be wasted keeping the ceilings warm. The heating system would not need to run as often, and your savings could be significant — all without compromising your comfort level.
2006-11-13 01:35:25
·
answer #2
·
answered by crimsonshedemon 5
·
1⤊
1⤋
According to the instructions on my Hunter Ceiling fan - Up. Suck the air up the center of the room pushing the warm air off the ceiling and gently down the walls on the outside of the room. But run the fan on low, not med/high. The air moves more gently this way. It still circulates the air, pushing the warm air off the ceiling, but you don't get the direct "wind-blown" effect of the fan. It's the feeling of the air moving against your skin that makes it feel cool.
For "open" floorplans, or houses with vaulted ceilings this can be critical since heat tends to keep rising until your family room is an icebox and your bedrooms are ovens.
2006-11-13 01:37:13
·
answer #3
·
answered by itsnotarealname 4
·
1⤊
1⤋
In wintry climate, a room feels chilly through warmth being misplaced during the partitions and ceiling. you additionally could make a room sense plenty warmer by potential of starting to be a "curtain" of heat air alongside all the partitions. You try this by potential of inflicting your ceiling fan to blow upwards. This forces the warmth air gathered on the ceiling to bypass outwards and then downwards alongside the partitions, cushioning the room's occupants from the nippiness of the partitions. It has the added effect of lessening the quantity of heat misplaced during the ceiling by potential of reducing the temperature there. (warmth loss will advance proportionally to the temperature distinction between the warmth component and chilly component of a barrier like the ceiling) In summer season, once you're heat and perspiring, you are able to sense cooler by potential of shifting air previous your dermis, evaporating your perspiration, thereby reducing your dermis temperature. (Evaporation is a internet "person" of heat.) to end this, regulate the fan to blow downward so the air strikes previous the floor of the room occupants.
2016-12-10 08:14:27
·
answer #4
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
The correct answer is... which ever direction make you feel good. You are circulating the air in you home to get a more even change of temp through out your home. Up or down is just an opinion, as long as you move the air over the entire room, or home your Central HVAC system will do it's job.
2006-11-13 03:56:20
·
answer #5
·
answered by Uncle Baby 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Hot air is light, while cold air is heavy. Therefore, you want to bring the warmer air down, so you run the fan down so it forces air down in winter. During summer, run it up to bring the cooler air up. Either way, the turbulence caused by a ceiling fan mixes the room air for a more consistent temperature throughout.
2006-11-13 01:33:32
·
answer #6
·
answered by Eddie M. 3
·
0⤊
2⤋
You run your fan blowing down..That way you are pulling heat down from the ceiling..
2006-11-13 01:38:12
·
answer #7
·
answered by marvine37 1
·
0⤊
2⤋
Set to "Winter" setting means pushing hot air DOWN
LATER: Some idiot has given all of us with the correct answer a thumbs down. The fan should be set on DOWN in spite of the foolish down-thumbs you see here
2006-11-13 01:27:37
·
answer #8
·
answered by Clarkie 6
·
0⤊
2⤋
DOWN<
theis brings the hot air down from the ceiling to the room so you can feel it.
BAd part is it makes a breeze that somepeople
claim makes them feel cold...
2006-11-13 01:33:37
·
answer #9
·
answered by deltaxray7 4
·
1⤊
2⤋
I think clockwise...Heat travels upward, so the downward motion should blow the warm air down.
2006-11-13 01:30:03
·
answer #10
·
answered by Vinegar Taster 7
·
1⤊
1⤋