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jszuch
Nov15-04, 03:17 PM
Why is the airflow of a fan (a regular house fan for instance) stronger on one side than it is the other? I think it has something to do with the fact that the airflow is a vortex, but I don't understand how this creates uneven airflow.

Thanks

russ_watters
Nov15-04, 03:56 PM
I don't understand the question. How is it stronger on one side?

jszuch
Nov15-04, 04:33 PM
I don't understand the question. How is it stronger on one side?

Let's say you are looking at the fan. We initially tested the airflow meter about 6 inches away from the fan, and centered (B). Then we measured a 45 degree angle from the fan at the 6 inch distance again, and took measurements again, both to the right and to the left. This would put the air flow meter roughly perpendicular to the meat of the fan blades. The air flow readings indicated that there was significantly more airflow from the left side of the fan (A) than there was from the right side of the fan (C).

Fan
/ | \
/ | \
/ | \
A B C

DaveC426913
Nov15-04, 05:54 PM
More data. What direction is the fan rotating in? CW or CCW?

The fan is rotationally symmetrical, not reflection symmetrical, so its vortex will be too. Are your measurment points horizontally level with the centre of the fan? If you were measuring a little high, you'd get a different result for the 'up' side of the fan than the 'down' side.

Was the fan physically distant from whatever it was sitting on? I can imagine a loss in air flow on one side but not the other if you were using a small fan sitting on a desk.