These fans were at a Pavilion of my town. They were installed in 2010 when they opened. Their in Brown finish & have long downrods. All 4 of them are on separate switches with forward/reverse switches.
They all seem be faster than another, the one with a bad capacitor is the slowest, and then one next to it seems to be the second slowest, and the one that you mentioned that had a balloon in it seems to go a bit slower than the one that goes the fastest, anyway. Great video
Funny enough I thought these were black ones still love them! Have that controller myself excited to install the brown one I just bought in my garage 👍🏻
Brandon, there’s no need to turn the knobs every inch, just do low speed, quarter turn like 3’o clock, another quarter turn like 12’oclock and then straight to high.
The load on the motor is heavier than the load on a non-industrial fan; this creates a larger moment of inertia (this is to rotational motion what mass is to linear motion). More mass = greater moment of inertia = less rotational acceleration. For the same reason, the spin down to off on industrial fans also takes longer.
@@brandonjohnson1386 You know, I’ve always wondered what Canadian Dr. Pepper tasted like, but if you have the knowledge, I’m also curious, why does much of Canada use a third or second pull chain to reverse the direction of a ceiling fan instead of the little switch like what we use here in the US and other territories?
@@ceilingfanaticandotherthin8572 I don't know. That's what a lot of vintage Canadian ceiling fans used but most newer ones use a reverse switch. There are some newer ones still use reverse chain.