To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Ceiling Fan Shop?

karoc

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 19, 2017
Messages
1,968
Location
Hemphill Tx
Ok before everybody start recommending Big *** Fans, well their like Festool in my world just out of my league.
With summer temps coming on strong, I came across ceiling fan with 100” blades at 300.00. Dang if it actually pushes air down from my 12’ ceiling height that would be great. I’m sure this is old subject, ceiling fans for shop, but wondering if there’s anyone that can say their fan actually works? Not just for shop declarations, but moves air. With me being able spend more time in shop trying finish my 1000sq ft retirement home, it be nice be cooler and maybe keep mosquitoes off of me. Any thoughts, suggestions, pics, links? Day dreaming-Tks
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

y'sguy

Well-known member
Joined
May 1, 2010
Messages
1,299
Location
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Any easily movable fan on the floor works better for me. Cheaper. Not hanging from the ceiling. Especially if you have a 12' ceiling.Lots of hot air up there. If you can find an old attic fan, set on its side, with protection around it, Perfect. Roll it out of the way when you're done. I use an old furnace fan. It was almost free. Mounted on casters After I wash out the garage I use it to dry the floor. Takes just a minute. The ceiling fan in my art studio with high ceilings was a complete waste of time and money.
 

jhelrey

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
7,228
Location
MN
I have a ceiling fan in my finished garage that is about 10" from the ceiling with 12' ceilings. It's nothing special and it moves enough air to feel it.
 

nadogail

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
31,850
Location
Coronado, CA
We used Ceiling fans in the house until we had the Air Conditioning installed. My shop has several floor fans, all discarded by former tenants.
My former tenants have left behind many useful things.
 

Hank11

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 19, 2019
Messages
1,136
Location
Tennessee
Yes, you want a fan and yes, it’ll move air and make the space more comfortable. And if you live in a place with high humidity, a dehumidifier will help in your shop a lot too.
 

LeonardY

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 16, 2011
Messages
5,004
Location
Southern California
I use a Vornado garage fan came with some wall mounts.
I also have a Jet air filter. It’s a bit loud on full but low it’s fine to me.
I put a deflector on the output of the Jet to better circulate the air.
 

WildBill

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Aug 20, 2021
Messages
1,960
Location
PNW
I just have a inexpensive 58" one in my 24x36 shop and it makes a big difference. Especially when I finally remember to switch directions on it every spring/fall so it moves the hot air the right way.
 

bluedog225

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 31, 2012
Messages
3,221
Location
Texas
My big 10 foot $300 Home Depot fake big *** fan doesn’t move a lot of air. I think it’s too close to the ceiling. Have to build a box to move it down.

Next time it’ll be a wall mounted fan
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

jmarkwolf

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 15, 2013
Messages
1,806
Location
Southeast Michigan
I have a Hampton Bay 54-inch ceiling fan (no light, wired control) in my 28ft x 30ft x 10ft shop, purchased from one of the home supply big box stores (can't remember which). The fan runs 24/7 and has done so for 13 years now.

The blades are "aerodynamic", meaning efficiently twisted like a propeller, and at the lowest speed works great at uniformly circulating both heated and air-conditioned air year-round. Any higher speed would "sweep the floor" from 10 feet up.

I installed the fan in December 2013 when I realized the heated air in my new shop stratified badly, meaning the upper half of the room was comfortable, but below the belt was very cool. After installing the ceiling fan, the heat was uniformly distributed.

I'll buy the same fan again when this one needs replacement, if it's still available.
 

Notgrownup

Well-known member
Joined
May 5, 2014
Messages
5,812
Location
Snow Hill NC
We just installed 6 10’ CANARM Fans in our warehouse at work, ceilings at 30’ high and we feel it. They were free from a Duke energy grant we just had to get them installed. Big As fans are very nice but holy shmoly, they are expensive.
 

Lassen Forge

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 26, 2014
Messages
14,875
Location
The romantic hills of central Umbria, Italy,
We installed ceiling vent fans in the old garage in Sacramento, the heat build up up there was WAY too intense, pushing it down would have been disastrous... better to flush all that heat outside. Had vents near the baseboard to let air in, also we had some old variable controlled electronics rack fans (3x4 grid, about 4 of them) in the windows to draw more air in for the soffit blowers to remove...

I eventually built a swamp cooler gig in one of the (former) windows to get some moist, cool air in there... but the biggie was venting the heat OUT.

No way I would have put a big air stirring fan or 3 in the shop like we had in the bedroom etc... it would have done nothing but push superhot air down at us, or draw that heat along the walls to the floor to be recycled up. Air movement is fine, but not if it's a convection oven.
 

bdbecker

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 18, 2015
Messages
5,525
Location
Iowa
HVLS (High-Volume Low-Speed) fans like Big *** fans (and any of their derivatives) work by creating a low speed, but larger column of air when compared to a conventional ceiling fan. If your shop is not conditioned, circulating air using a HVLS will not do much to actually cool the space, it'll just make the temperature more consistent throughout. Because they are designed to circulate air efficiently and break up stratification, they do not necessarily create the breeze effect that people are accustomed to from conventional, higher speed fans. It's not that HVLS fans don't work, they just work differently.

If you want to feel a breeze and keep the mosquitos off your back, you won't be happy with a HVLS fan. A good size barrel fan (or two) pointed at your work area would be the better option.
 

bluedog225

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 31, 2012
Messages
3,221
Location
Texas
HVLS (High-Volume Low-Speed) fans like Big *** fans (and any of their derivatives) work by creating a low speed, but larger column of air when compared to a conventional ceiling fan. If your shop is not conditioned, circulating air using a HVLS will not do much to actually cool the space, it'll just make the temperature more consistent throughout. Because they are designed to circulate air efficiently and break up stratification, they do not necessarily create the breeze effect that people are accustomed to from conventional, higher speed fans. It's not that HVLS fans don't work, they just work differently.

If you want to feel a breeze and keep the mosquitos off your back, you won't be happy with a HVLS fan. A good size barrel fan (or two) pointed at your work area would be the better option.

sounds right.

But the fans at Costco sure do blow
 

jmdirk

Well-known member
Joined
May 4, 2015
Messages
691
I installed two cheap industrial fans from Home Depot. Wired, no lights, just basic fans. I think they are in 50-52 inch range. You definitely feel the air moving when you've got them on medium or high. I think they were $200 CAD at the time.
 

bwringer

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2013
Messages
10,224
Location
Indianapolis
The size of the shop matters... some of you are talking about really big shops with HVAC, some are talking about unheated/uncooled garages .

As mentioned above, in an un-air-conditioned space like yer average garage or small shop, I'd want to vent that heat out in the summer rather than stir it up and mix it with the cooler air below. So a gable or attic fan, depending, would make more sense here, along with some floor or wall-mounted fans for local cooling and to perhaps slightly inconvenience the mosquitos.

The OP mentioned 12' ceiling and mosquitos, so that would seem to imply a smaller shop or garage, often used with the door open.
 

Steve W.

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 27, 2019
Messages
1,231
Location
Southwest oHIo
My big 10 foot $300 Home Depot fake big *** fan doesn’t move a lot of air. I think it’s too close to the ceiling. Have to build a box to move it down.
How high is the ceiling and how close is the fan to it?

I don't have any fans in the shop, but have several in the house. House ceiling is about 7' 9", so we have "ceiling hugger" fans. I have found that at any speed faster than LOW, the fans simply refuse to blow DOWN. Mainly due to supply starvation. With the fan blowing down, air needs to move across the ceiling to get above the fan blades. Due to the hugger situation, there is simply not enough room. The bigger the fan, the bigger the problem.

I have also found that with the fan blowing UP, air above the blades moves across the ceiling quite nicely, gets to the walls, drops down, then returns to the area under the fan for another cycle. Nice air movement in the room, but no direct breeze blowing on me. :thumbup: Yes, this works for heating or cooling seasons. As someone previously mentioned, it's more for removal of air stratification than it is for 'cooling' breezes.

Because of this behavior (and my preference for not having air blowing directly on me), I don't even bother to change fan direction with the seasons. They always blow UP.

.
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom