Your ceiling fan wants to have a winter alliance with your HVAC. Of course, when it’s hot, they have their summer run, with the fan wafting your body heat away from your skin, thereby keeping you cool so the HVAC doesn’t have to work so hard for you to be comfortable.
But, in the winter, if your ceiling fan sits unused and unloved, you need to get it moving again, only this time, make it go forward, or clockwise when you look up at it. In the clockwise direction, the fan blades pull the air up to the ceiling and down the walls of the room. Since hot air rises and hovers at the top of the room, this cold air pushes that warmth away from the ceiling and down the walls, right to the part of the house where you live--on the floor.
Lower your heating bill
This change in fan blade directions will lower your heating bill. Why? While it’s true you’re running the fan, the net effect of the warm air moving down is that you do not have to run the furnace long enough to heat the whole top of the room before you feel any warmth at all. Because the fan is blowing the air ‘up’, instead of blowing your skin, you don’t lose body heat the way you do from the summer fan direction.
How to change the direction of the fan blades
Most fans have a switch at the side of the base which will change the direction of the fan blades. All you need to remember is counterclockwise will cool the room and clockwise will warm it.
If you’re tired of your fan, you can paint or even decorate the blades with paint or paper. Personally, we’d like to see someone try faux metal contact paper on a set of tired wood blades. But there are a lot of different options, and some people change the look of their fan seasonally. (See Pinterest for some ideas.)
The time when you switch the fan is also an excellent time to give it a good cleaning. Some people use an old pillowcase to clean the blades. If you aren’t sure how, there are plenty of demonstrations on YouTube, many of which have ads which will take longer to watch than the actual job of cleaning the fan.
Once you realize how much more comfortable the winter ceiling fan direction makes your home, your ceiling fan may become your HVAC may end up running together most of the year.
If your Phoenix area fan isn’t working correctly, wobbles or needs electrical repair, give us a call at 602-362-9763