No, if you are not in the room you are just wasting electricity.
it pulls all hot air out from the house
The air moving across the moisture causes it to evaporate. Evaporation being a cooling process, it makes you feel cold.
Not Untill 2 yrs of it being open
You should ask your science teacher! He or she would be more than happy to talk to you about it. All the cool experiments should always be done only under the supervision of an adult.
The solvent (ex. water) must be released by evaporation.
A single ceiling fan cannot cool an entire large home. However there are whole home fans which can achieve this.
Swamp cooler, fans, ceiling fans.
In order to cool a room with a ceiling fan, the fan blades should rotate counterclockwise to create a downdraft of cool air. This direction helps create a wind-chill effect, making you feel cooler without changing the room temperature.
74 degrees
Thanks for answering the question Should ceiling vents be directed towards the window or the room? NOT
To effectively cool a two-story house using fans, place box fans in windows on the lower floor facing inward to bring in cool air. Use ceiling fans on the upper floor to circulate air and create a breeze. Open windows on the upper floor to allow hot air to escape. This will help create a cross breeze and cool the house efficiently.
form_title= Wiring A Ceiling Fan form_header= Cool off with a new ceiling fan. Is the ceiling fan installed?*= () Yes () No Is there a light included in the ceiling fan?*= () Yes () No Please describe the wiring problem in detail.*= _ [50]
House of Cool was created in 2004.
Summer = clockwise Winter = counter-clockwise
To bring cool air from the 1st floor to the 2nd floor, you should set the ceiling fan to rotate counterclockwise when looking up at it. This helps push the cooler air upwards towards the 2nd floor.
Up, do the fact that warm air rises and cold air will fall. So, force the colder air up and it will cool the whole area. --------------------------------------------------- Trinity Alex: Actually, it depends on a lot of things... like how big is the room, ceiling height, air conditioner cooling power... room sealing... If the cool air is blown upwards, yes, you will cool the room pretty uniformly - but you will not "feel" the cool the air as fast as if the cool air was blown downwards - (simply because we occupy the space from the floor up, and not from the ceiling down) - scientific explanation: the cold air from the AC reaches the ceiling, now it will cool the very hot air that resides there, only after a considerable amount of time will the ceiling air be cool enough that it will actually drop down [and it will drop down gradually, firstly cooling for example the first feet from the ceiling, then the next, and so on]. Also if you blow the cool air downward, you can leave the hot air that resides towards the ceiling undisturbed because there is no reason to cool the air from the ceiling; if cool air is blown downwards, you will be able to cool a larger area. I also have a mobile AC unit, that has adjustable vents - after a lot of calculations (but mostly -personal- empirical data) - I have concluded that its best to cool the air at which your head is (this is always true, no matter the ceiling height, room space, room sealing or the air conditioner's cooling power). * because of my mobile AC's hot air duct, I can't close my window properly - and I can tell you 100% that it's a bad idea to set the vents to blow the air upwards. (and no, I will not cut a hole through the glass, it's not my house). Trinity Alex -----------------------------------------
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.