Summer = clockwise
Winter = counter-clockwise
Counterclockwise
Counterclockwise
Ccw
Yes
The is low in the summer
In the summer the sun rises in the morning, the time of sunrise gets earlier each day up to mid summer then after mid summer gets later each day.
Actually the days are getting shorter. (Note that summer follows the summer solstice.)
It is a summer constellation in the northern hemisphere.
Hello! This summer begins on the Summer Solstice, which is actually on June 20th, this Friday! Squidney de Squid
It depends on the pitch (angle) of the blades. On most, it's counter-clockwise. Counterclockwise in the summer for cooling and clockwise in the winter for dispersing warm air.
Depends on how the blades are angled. In winter, you want it to blow the warm air off the ceiling, to the floor. In summer, you want it to pull the cool air upwards.
Counter Clockwise. Push air down (down position on most fans)
lay on the floor and look up at it. If it is moving the same direction as a clock it is moving clockwise. Hold a piece of tissue paper at a corner such that it is near (but not touching) the fan blades. If the fan lifts the paper toward the ceiling then it is rotating clockwise. This is best for winter. If the fan pushes the paper toward the floor (causing a breeze) then it is rotating counter clockwise. This is best for summer.
Fans should spin counterclockwise in the summer. The counterclockwise rotation pushes cool air down, while clockwise rotation can be used at a low speed in the winter to pull cool air up and push warmer air down.Keep in mind, though, that ceiling fans don't actually cool rooms—they just create a breeze that has a wind chill effect, making you feel cooler. So you can turn the fan off if nobody's home.
In winter, fan should blow down,heat rises,get it back. In summer ,fan should blow up for a 2 story vaulted ceiling,to circulate air but not blow down hot air.On a one story in summer it can blow either,but it's a prefference.Up is ok,but down you get a lower cool index feeling.
For most models your ceiling fan blades should be turning counter clockwise in the summer. As a general rule, the blades need to spin in the direction of the slope on the blades to create a downward draft which makes the air feel cooler. You should feel a draft or breeze when you are standing underneath the fan if it is turning in the right direction. If you do not feel that then you need to switch it to the other direction.
[1] It depends upon whether the fan's standard, or not. [2] Standard refers to how most fans are made. And most are made so that counterclockwise is what's needed for summer cooling, clockwise for winter heating. Non-standard's the opposite. [3] How to tell the difference? Check to see which way the blades rotate when the switch is up, as it should be for winter, or down for summer. Stand underneath the fan. With the former, at the highest setting, there shouldn't be a cool breeze in the face. With the latter, there should.
Not all fans do that. Some are also reversible. Also the direction of turning is opposite if you observe from the opposite side.A bit more:On ceiling fans, they are made to be reversed for a reason, so the blades can either pull the air up or push it down. For example, on mine, with the way the blades are tilted, when it goes clockwise, it pulls the air up, pulling the warmer air upwards. When I flip the switch to reverse the direction to counter clockwise, the blades push the air downwards.For home ceiling fans, the air should be moving down in the summer time. In the winter time when the home heating unit is being used, the air should be drawn up to the ceiling. This causes a flow pattern that circulates up through the fan to the ceiling, across the ceiling and down the walls to the floor where it gets drawn back up to the ceiling. This rotational pattern draws the warm air from the ceiling and redistributes it to the floor where you can sense the warmth.
For summer use, the airflow should go down directly from the fan to the floor. For winter use it should pull the air from the floor towards the ceiling so it flows across the ceiling and around the room. So as to whether it should be clock-wise or counter clock-wise, that would depend on the angle of your blades. It's best to just stand under it when it's on. In the summer you should feel the air blowing on you from the fan and in the winter you shouldn't.
Ceiling fans help to keep a room comfortable without putting a strain on the heating or aiir conditioning unit. They come equipped with a switch that will move the blades into the optimal position for cold winter weather or the hot summer months.Adjusting the ceiling fan takes only seconds. Properly positioned fan blades move warm air up and away during the summer months. They move warm air down toward room occupants when cold winter weather prevails.Minka is the leading producer of ceiling fans. A huge selection of Minka Aire ceiling fans can be viewed at Minka Group.net.
When clocks were first made, they were modeled on the existing timepiece of the sun and the sundial. In the Northern hemisphere the sun appears to track across the sky in a clockwise direction. When facing towards the position of the midday sun (south in the northern hemisphere): starting from the east, the sun appears to rotate or follow an arc up and north and then south and down across the sky during the day. In the southern hemishere the apparent arc and rotation is anticlockwise when facing towards the position of the midday sun (north).