Some internet personality just made this go viral. I had no idea!
Ceiling Fans Have Switches For Hot And Cold Air And Lots Of People Are Just Now Finding This Out
WHAT A DISCOVERY!
www.buzzfeed.com
Cool weather mode sucks air up rather than push it down. The idea is it forces warm air down but on the sides of the room rather than creating a draft in the middle.
Really? Look closer and see if theres a side switch anywhere on the housing. Unless fan direction switches are a US thing.Most ceiling fans I've seen only have one switch. And that's solely reserved for speed.
Do you know many millennials building homes from scratch? How would they ever have the opportunity to read a ceiling fan instruction manual?This is a standard feature.
Do Millennials not know how to work ceiling fans?
Most ceiling fans I've seen only have one switch. And that's solely reserved for speed.
Do you know many millennials building homes from scratch? How would they ever have the opportunity to read a ceiling fan instruction manual?
Knew about this, but I have to google the direction to swap every time the seasons change.
Are you in the US? If so you're probably just mistaken. It's a basic feature. Do they not have them in other countries?Most ceiling fans I've seen only have one switch. And that's solely reserved for speed.
Counterclockwise vs clockwise they mean
I wish my cielling fan had labels for the switch, Im.always confused on which way is winter and which way is summer
This is true but during "not so summer" months you can get away with AC not on 24/7If you live in FL, fans ain't cutting it. You need to spring for central AC or you're screwed.
Yes one of them pushes down and one pushes up. It's the same idea.
If you live in FL, fans ain't cutting it. You need to spring for central AC or you're screwed.
Most ceiling fans I've seen only have one switch. And that's solely reserved for speed.
Air conditioners do dehumidify the air.This is only a vaguely related question but the air in my apartment feels really dry lately despite the humidity of summer. My eyes have been watering a lot, which causes the skin around the edges of my eyes to dry out and turn red. I got a humidity monitor and it says the humidity in my apartment is consistently around 35-45% which is considered normal. I do run ceiling fans, air conditioning, and other fans a lot, and I tried turning them all off and using a humidifier, which sort of helped, but it's weird that I have to go through all this when it's 90 degrees outside and like 75% humidity. Is this related to my fan and air conditioner settings?
This is only a vaguely related question but the air in my apartment feels really dry lately despite the humidity of summer. My eyes have been watering a lot, which causes the skin around the edges of my eyes to dry out and turn red. I got a humidity monitor and it says the humidity in my apartment is consistently around 35-45% which is considered normal. I do run ceiling fans, air conditioning, and other fans a lot, and I tried turning them all off and using a humidifier, which sort of helped, but it's weird that I have to go through all this when it's 90 degrees outside and like 75% humidity. Is this related to my fan and air conditioner settings?