Stand beneath the running fan and if you feel a cooling breeze it s turning correctly.
Ceiling fan direction cool air.
A ceiling fan that spins clockwise will draw cooler air up and force warmer air near the ceiling down and out toward walls.
It allows you to turn your thermostat up a few degrees.
It also helps to pick up air from the air.
This is the best ceiling fan direction for air conditioning since it makes the air feel cooler than it is.
This will create an updraft pulling cool air up underneath the fan away from you.
During cold temperatures or winter your fan should spin clockwise at a low speed to draw the cold air up the ceiling and force warm air built at the roof down into the room.
Most of us don t use our fans in the winter.
This movement will push up the air and pull the warm trapped air down the sides of the room improving heat distribution.
If not change directions usually by flicking a switch on the fan s base.
The cool air evaporates perspiration and creates a wind chill effect which makes you feel cooler without affecting the room temperature.
Popular for their ability to redistribute cool air throughout a room ceiling fans turn counterclockwise and create a current that moves down and out which then sends air back up along the walls.
Your clockwise ceiling fan will push that warm air out into the room.
In the summer ceiling fans should rotate counterclockwise to push cool air down to the floor.
The blades should move from the top left then down to the right and then back to the top.
To make sure it is set correctly stand directly under the fan blades and watch the blades rotate.
Typically it s counterclockwise or left for summer and clockwise for winter but the best method is to follow the steps above.
In the summertime run your ceiling fan counter clockwise to push cool air down.
Because warm air rises the air near the ceiling can be three to four degrees warmer than air near the floor.
To help move warm air that is trapped on the ceiling blades should turn forward in a clockwise motion.
A ceiling fan should rotate counterclockwise in the summer so the blades push cooler air down in a column.
Your fan is now turning in a clockwise direction rotating to the right.
Warm air rises so your ceiling is holding the nice toasty air.
It s best to run the fan on a low speed so that it doesn t create too much of a cooling breeze.