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.
The edge of the blade should be called as edge of the blade. But in practice the cutting edge is probably called as margin of the blade. The expert in English language should explain better.
The sharp edge of the blade should rotate in the same direction as the engine. Turn the engine slightly to see which direction it rotates and install the blade accordingly.
On a blade, the cutting edge is the sharp side.
On a blade, the cutting edge is the sharp side.
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.
Hasaki (波崎) = "the edge of a blade" or "Cutting edge"
the sharp is called the teeth and the cutting edge is the blade
A blade is the flat cutting edge of a knife.
the strongest blade is the cold rune edge lol jking
An edge. A horizontal edge, to be more precise.
Balancing actThe way I was told is to get some weights ( available at the hardware store ) and start with one blade, tape the weight to the blade and run the fan if it gets better affix it permanantly, if it gets worse try another blade till you have balanced the unit. A ceiling fan exerts a lot more force on an electrical box than a light or other ceiling hung fixture, because it moves constantly and has a greater weight.More info about balancing a ceiling fan on this website:See related links below.
Noun: Standing on the edge Adjective: The edge of the blade Me thinks.