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[Spridgets] Thermal dynamics question (No LBC Content)

Subject: [Spridgets] Thermal dynamics question (No LBC Content)
From: bmwwxman at gmail.com (Jim Johnson)
Date: Wed, 19 Jan 2011 00:21:19 -0600
References: <mailman.6301.1295401122.23296.spridgets@autox.team.net> <827B8F2CD6834ACF8BAA5610277A7B0C@OfficePC>
Buy a ceiling fan.  They will reverse in direction blowing heat down in the
winter and up in the summer.  Google "Convection".  What you are proposing
is setting up a circulation of the air in the room so that the cold air
mixes with the warm and you approximate an even temperature throughout the
room.  That is precisely what ceilings fans are made to do.  And they won't
cost you much different than what you are proposing and will do a MUCH more
efficient job of it.

A modicum of scotch will make the temperature difference far less
noticeable....

Cheers!!
Jim

On Tue, Jan 18, 2011 at 9:17 PM, Bob Gardner <rdgard at cox.net> wrote:

>  NO LBC CONTENT!
>
> Hi all,
>
> I know that a lot of the people on this list are much smarter than I am on
> many different topics.  Several times I have asked a question and gotten
> great answers that I would not have thought of.
>
> So here is my situation and followed by my question.
>
> When it gets chilly here at night in the winter (don't tell me how much
> colder it is where you are, ok?) I sometimes turn on the heater and it gets
> plenty warm up at the ceiling and still chilly half down the room and worse
> on the floor.  Ok, we all know heat goes up.
>
> So My big idea is to build a small square tube (about 6 inches square) and
> put a small silent computer fan in it.  I have an area next to a book case
> that if I paint it the wall color, you would never notice it. (Here is
> where
> I need your advice.)  I want to take the cold air from the floor and push
> it
> up the tube and exit it at the top so it will start a movement of air,
> pulling the cold air from the floor and warming it up at the ceiling,
> creating a more even temp distribution in the room.
>
> OR
>
> Should I suck the hot air from the ceiling and exit it on the floor level,
> heating up the cold air on the floor.  Or does it matter if the air
> movement
> goes up or down?
>
> These little fans move about 100 cu ft/min of air.  If I put two fans, one
> at the bottom and one at the top would it increase the air flow or just
> make
> one of them work harder and/or make more noise.  I know if I put them in
> parallel it would push twice as much air, but in series would it make any
> difference?
>
> Thanks in advance for your good advice and your slings and arrows about my
> freezing 56 degree winter here in San Diego.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Bob
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-- 
Cheers!!
Jim
Then there was the mind reader who moved to Washington, D.C. and couldn't
find work.

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