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Ceiling fans are one of the most
popular and generally well regarded of all home energy
efficiency features. They have a very pragmatic appeal
to those who want to cut summer electric bills. At the
same time, they offer a decorative alternative to typical
light fixtures. So it should come as no surprise that
two-thirds of American households now have ceiling fans.
Home improvement centers do a brisk and growing business
in sales to do-it-yourselfers, and its not uncommon
to find ceiling fans installed by builders in nearly
every bedroom and living area in many new homes.
But while ceiling fans can help
cut summer energy use, they can also be substantial
energy usersdepending on how they are used and
what kind of lights, if any, are part of the fan package.
Because ceiling fan lights are often the brightest,
most centrally located, and most conveniently switched
fixtures in the room, they get used about three to four
hours per day. And, since ceiling lights don't tend
to be efficient lights, these light kits actually use
more electricity than the fan motors do, even though
the fan motors often run for more hours per day.
Based on our own modeling and input
from fan manufacturers and utilities, we believe a typical
ceiling fan with light kit consumes about 300 kwh/year.
ENERGY STARü labeled models cut that consumption to
approximately 120 kwh/year, while providing equal or
greater light output and airflow. This means that an
ENERGY STAR labeled ceiling fan can save you more energy
than an ENERGY STAR labeled refrigerator compared to
a typical new model of each! Look for the first ENERGY
STAR labeled in Loweñs, Home Depot, and other retail
stores in early 2002.
Here are some tips on buying the
right fan and using it efficiently.
Do
a little comparison shopping.
The fans with the best blade and motor designs are 3
to 9 times as efficient as the worst models, and are
often quieter as well. Look for models with the highest
air flow efficiency (CFM/watt)at each of their three
speeds. These numbers will appear in a special information
box on each ENERGY STAR labeled fan package, and will
begin to appear on many standard fan models as well.
The ENERGY STAR website (www.energystar.gov) can also
help consumers find the names of manufacturers and retailers
that sell highly efficient fans.
Buy
an energy-efficient light kit for your fan.
About 80% of the possible savings from a more efficient
ceiling fan happen in the lighting. So be sure any new
fans you buy contain ENERGY STAR labeled lighting. The
designs with built-in ballasts and pin-based fluorescent
lamps will probably be more efficient than ones with
screw-based compact fluorescents, but both are much
better than incandescent lamps. With a bit of searching,
you can also find very small (subcompact) fluorescent
bulbs to use in your existing fan.
ENERGY STAR labeled lighting in
most cases will cut your fanñs total lighting energy
use by 60 to 80%, and keep you from changing light bulbs
nearly as often. Remember ° multiple low wattage incandescent
bulbs generally provide even less light than a single
bulb with the same total wattage. For that reason, you
may be happier with fans that have a single, central
light globe than ones with multiple "stalks" or globes.
Fans
are for people, not rooms. Room air temperatures
are normally 20œF30œF cooler than body temperature.
Ceiling fans can improve occupant comfort at a given
room temperature by creating a windchill effect when
they blow relatively cool air across the skin. Because
the furniture and the thermostat are already at roughly
the same temperature as the room air, they cant
"feel" the windchill. So when you leave the
room, switch the fan and
its light offyoull save energy and money.
For
every season, turn, turn, turn
. During
the summer, a ceiling fan increases comfort
by blowing air downward on room
occupants. But that same windchill can actually
feel like a draft in winter, which is why
ceiling fan motors should be reversed to
blow air upward in winter. This helps disperse
the warm air that tends to gather near ceilings,
distributing it more evenly throughout the
room, especially around the perimeter and
near the floor. Fan direction is normally
controlled by a slide switch on the motor
housing. Usually, the up position corresponds
to upward airflow and the down position
to downward airflow. This may be a little
inconvenient to reach, but throwing that
switch twice a year will pay for itself
in improved comfort and energy savings.
It also helps to pay close attention
to the downrod length of a fan, particularly in rooms
with tall ceilings. Generally speaking, a fan will provide
a greater "wind chill" effect if itñs close to you than
if itñs far away. So if you have a 12 foot ceiling,
youñre better off using a 3 or 4 foot downrod than mounting
the fan only 6 inches or a foot down from the ceiling.
Fans that mount right next to the ceiling (so-called
"hugger" models) are often highly inefficient, since
they have difficulty bringing in fresh air behind the
blades to push downward.
Dial in the savings with thermostats.
Ceiling fans can save quite a bit
of energy if summer users raise air conditioning
thermostats. In the Florida climate, these
net savings are roughly 14% for a 2†F increase,
according to the Florida Solar Energy Center.
The reason is no big mystery; ceiling fan
motors use only 10 to 100 watts, depending
on size and speed. By contrast, central
air conditioners gobble 2,000 to 5,000 watts,
while room air conditioners consume 600
to 3,000 watts.
Savings are also possible on the
heating side. Electric space heaters typically devour
600 to 1,500 watts per room. So any time you can run
a ceiling fan instead of one of these guzzlers to achieve
the same level of comfort, you are saving energy.
But the trick is in the thermostat.
The Florida Solar Energy Center found no difference
between the air conditioner thermostat settings in Florida
houses that had ceiling fans operating and those that
didnt. As a result, the houses that were using
ceiling fans had even higher energy bills!
The lesson is simple: Give the
thermostat dial a spin if you want to save energy. You
may find that ceiling fans are the perfect way to extend
the shoulder season as wellshortening the number
of days you need air conditioning in the summer and
central heating in the winter.
Know
your limits. Ceiling fans
can supplement traditional HVAC systems,
but cannot duplicate the wide range of functions
they perform: ventilation, filtration, humidification,
dehumidification, heating, and cooling.
Unlike whole-house fans or even box fans
in an open window, ceiling fans are not
ventilation
devices; they are circulation
devices. They dont bring cooler air
into a home or vent warm, humid air from
it.
Though some ceiling fans now include
filters within their blades to trap particles and odors,
most have no real effect on the relative staleness of
air in a room. The way to get rid of stale air is to
exhaust it from the room and bring in fresh or filtered
air to replace it. And dont count on ceiling fans
to cool things off by themselves on a really hot day;
if the air in the room becomes as warm as body temperature,
that "breeze" wont provide much windchill.
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