On average, ceiling fans tend to use less electricity than standing fans, however it does depend on the exact models you are comparing. The average ceiling fan consumes 31.1W compared to 42.5W on average for standing fans.
@@PolishRawr Cooling the room - ceiling fan. Cooling YOU - standing fan. Either way, the more people you have in a room the higher the heat and humidity will get. Heat alone - one adult at rest emits about 700btu/hr in heat. Breathing and sweat adds to the humidity. 10 people in the room needs 3/4 ton of AC to cool properly. One standard windows can let in 5,000 btu of heat with the sun beaming in. Just two of those you need an additional 1 ton of cooling. Low or no insulation and the demand skyrockets. Using a clothes dryer venting outside uses 400CFM of your expensive air conditioned air to do the job, per minute. That means your house has to replace that air with more air from the outside via air leaks, thus you get a double whammy on your cooling bill. Venting inside adds both humidity AND 18K Btu's of heat per hour, which is 1 1/2 tons of additional AC needed. Same with using the cook top or oven, both add even more heat. Some people use a window A/C for one room and use the house A/C at night (after 10pm) when it is cooler and more efficient. More stuff in your house the bigger the heat sink will be and the longer it will take to cool the house. Many ways to be cool and cut costs. Sandwiches is a big one. Microwaved food another. Eating out/delivery another. Hanging clothes on a clothes line can save a bundle if you do laundry regularly. Ceiling vent in the bathroom also draws your your expensive air conditioned air. Exhaust fan above the stove is a pretty big loser for A/C, if you have and use one. Kids running in and out of the house - either IN or OUT! Unless you want to air condition the neighborhood. Game nite? Go to their house to watch the game. Saves on your A/C costs. Very SHORT haircuts can help keep you cool. Hair is an insulator. So is fat....
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Thank you! Ceiling fan you can adjust the flow of the air in summer & winter.
How about cooling a space without Ac, which one cools a space faster?
We have a whole article with 41 tips of how to cool your space without AC: homecaprice.com/how-to-cool-down-a-room-without-air-conditioner/
Which one uses less electricity?
On average, ceiling fans tend to use less electricity than standing fans, however it does depend on the exact models you are comparing. The average ceiling fan consumes 31.1W compared to 42.5W on average for standing fans.
Ceiling fans move air, other fans blow air.
Big difference between the two as to how they move air.
this one should be the discussion of the video
So which will cool the room more effectively and efficiently?
@@PolishRawr Cooling the room - ceiling fan. Cooling YOU - standing fan.
Either way, the more people you have in a room the higher the heat and humidity will get.
Heat alone - one adult at rest emits about 700btu/hr in heat.
Breathing and sweat adds to the humidity.
10 people in the room needs 3/4 ton of AC to cool properly.
One standard windows can let in 5,000 btu of heat with the sun beaming in.
Just two of those you need an additional 1 ton of cooling.
Low or no insulation and the demand skyrockets.
Using a clothes dryer venting outside uses 400CFM of your expensive air conditioned air to do the job, per minute. That means your house has to replace that air with more air from the outside via air leaks, thus you get a double whammy on your cooling bill.
Venting inside adds both humidity AND 18K Btu's of heat per hour, which is 1 1/2 tons of additional AC needed. Same with using the cook top or oven, both add even more heat.
Some people use a window A/C for one room and use the house A/C at night (after 10pm) when it is cooler and more efficient.
More stuff in your house the bigger the heat sink will be and the longer it will take to cool the house.
Many ways to be cool and cut costs.
Sandwiches is a big one. Microwaved food another. Eating out/delivery another.
Hanging clothes on a clothes line can save a bundle if you do laundry regularly.
Ceiling vent in the bathroom also draws your your expensive air conditioned air.
Exhaust fan above the stove is a pretty big loser for A/C, if you have and use one.
Kids running in and out of the house - either IN or OUT! Unless you want to air condition the neighborhood.
Game nite? Go to their house to watch the game. Saves on your A/C costs.
Very SHORT haircuts can help keep you cool. Hair is an insulator.
So is fat....
I dont like fans they ruin my hairstyle, and i dont like air conditioning they make my eye feel dry, i think i will move to a more friendly climate
Nice accent 😂