A lot of our customers have been contemplating installing a whole house fan in Santa Cruz, Marin, Santa Clara, and Sonoma for their homes to either replace their AC or as a complement to it. GreenBuildingAdvisor.com posted a great article that discussed – Whole House Fans: Do They Help? It is so good that we wanted to reprint it here. Thanks to GreenBuildingAdvisor.com for a great article!
How a Whole House Fan Works
Whole house fans are used to cool a house at night when the heat of the day has passed and the outdoor temperature has dropped enough to feel comfortable. When should you turn on a whole house fan? The answer depends on your climate and your comfort range. The outdoor temperature should certainly be below 80°F — or, better yet, below 70°F.
Energy Efficiency of Whole House Fans
The main advantage of using a whole house fan instead of an air conditioner is to save energy. A whole house fan usually draws between 200 and 700 watts — about 10% to 15% of the power drawn by a central air conditioner (2,000 to 5,000 watts). If evenings are cool enough, it’s fairly easy to lower the temperature of your home and your furniture with a whole house fan — sometimes in less than an hour.
When to Use a Whole House Fan
Whole house fans are intended to be used in homes that are not air-conditioned. It makes no sense to introduce lots of (potentially humid) exterior air into a house at night if you intend to turn on an air conditioner the next day. If you’re using your air conditioner, keep your windows closed, 24 hours a day, so that the air conditioner isn’t faced with an increased latent load due to exterior humidity entering the house at night.
Does your house not have AC, and you’re considering a whole house fan installation in Santa Cruz, Marin, Santa Clara, or Sonoma? We can help!
Operating a Whole House Fan Effectively
In most cases, a whole house fan is mounted in the attic floor, above a rectangular grille in the ceiling of a central hallway. Once the outdoor temperature cools down — usually in the evening or early morning — the homeowner opens a few downstairs windows, closes the fireplace damper, and turns on the fan. (The wall switch that controls a whole house fan should be properly labeled so that it isn’t accidentally turned on during the winter.)
The fan pulls air from the hallway and blows it into the attic. Since whole house fans are relatively powerful — they are usually rated between 2,000 cfm and 6,000 cfm — they quickly exhaust the hot indoor air, allowing cooler outdoor air to enter through the downstairs windows. Once the house has cooled off, the fan can be turned off and the windows closed. Most people who have whole house fans keep their windows closed from early morning until evening so that the cool air inside the house doesn’t escape.
You Need Enough Attic Vents to Let the Air Escape
Since a whole house fan blows all of the hot air from the home into the attic, the fan won’t work effectively unless the attic has large openings to exhaust the hot air. Most old-fashioned whole house fans require more attic venting than the minimum amount required by the building code — anything from a little more to about twice as much, depending on the size of the fan.
Rule of Thumb for Attic Venting
Here’s the rule of thumb for attic venting:
- You need one square foot of net free vent area for every 750 cfm of fan capacity.
- The vent area can be a combination of soffit vents, ridge vents, and gable vents.
- If the vent has insect screening, increase the opening size by 50%.
- It’s better to have too much vent area than not enough.
How to Size Your Whole House Fan
The traditional recommendation is to choose a fan that can move between 15 and 20 air changes per hour (ach).
To size your fan:
- Divide your home’s volume by 4 to obtain the cfm rating for 15 ach.
- If your ceiling height is between 8 and 9 feet, multiply the floor area of your house by 3 to get the cfm rating.
At Bellows Plumbing, Heating & Air, we can help you find the best whole house fan installation in Santa Cruz, Marin, Santa Clara, and Sonoma for your home.
Where Does a Whole House Fan Make Sense?
If you live in the right climate, whole house fans are a great way to keep your house cool. In the U.S., they make more sense in the arid West than in the humid Southeast, since most homeowners don’t want to invite lots of humid air into their homes. Whole house fans make sense in areas with cool nights. If you live somewhere where the temperature stays in the 80s all night long, a whole house fan won’t help you much. However, even if you need to seal up your house and turn on your air conditioner during the hottest months of summer, a whole house fan may be useful during the spring and fall seasons, when nights are cool but days remain hot.
Why Bellows Installs the QuietCool Brand:
- Quietest whole house fans on the market.
- Most energy efficient fans on the market and are Title 24 compliant.
- Have a higher cfm rating to move more air through your home.
- Affordable for our customers.
Schedule Your Whole House Fan Installation Today
If you’ve been thinking about installing a new A/C or a whole house fan in Santa Cruz, Marin, Santa Clara, and Sonoma, call Bellows Plumbing, Heating & Air today at 831-244-6718. We’d be happy to help get the work done before it gets hot! Bellows Plumbing, Heating & Air is the San Francisco Bay Area plumbing, heating, and air conditioning contractor you can count on!