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Home
Improvement: Ceiling Fans
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by: Shaan
Randow
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Ceiling
fans come in a wide variety of styles and colors
to match any homeowners interior design wishes.
They come with and without lighting. Three to five
blades. In colors of black, white, brown, made of
wood, covered with animal print fabric or styled
with carved leaves.
Ceiling fans have come a long way since the
industrial revolution where they were dreamed up
by sweating factory workers. These workers
attached wooden or metal blades to the overhead
whirling shafts that were used to drive the
machinery they worked on.
Ceiling fans are a great way to keep cool in the
summer on those nights when you don't have to run
the air conditioner. Ceiling fans are much less
noisy and obtrusive than box fans that sit on your
floor or in your windows. And, you know that heat
rises, right? Well, in the winter months running
your fan on low and in reverse speed will bring
down the heat that accumulates up in at the
ceiling, helping you to feel warmer.
Before you purchase a ceiling fan you'll need to
consider the blade sweep. You don't want to
overwhelm a smaller room with a ceiling fan that's
too big, but, you also want to make sure that the
ceiling fan will be able to displace enough air to
cool you off in a larger room. Another
consideration before purchasing a ceiling fan is
the length it will drop from the ceiling. A home
with an 8 foot ceiling would probably use a three
inch down rod for a ceiling fan, and a room with a
fifteen foot high ceiling would need at least a
one foot down rod, up to a five foot down rod. It
is suggested that you have at least seven feet of
clearance from the floor to avoid accidents.
Installing a ceiling fan yourself is a fairly easy
job for most do-it- yourselfer's. There are many
online sites available to help you if you have any
problems or questions.
About the author:
This article courtesy of http://www.about-ceiling-fans.net
Circulated by Article
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