What's the secret behind Dyson's new bladeless fan?

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In summary: The fan is in the base - it pushes air through the circumference of the ring where it comes out along the axis through tiny holes.The idea is a smoother airflow and no whirling blades - so quieter and saferThere's a write-up on Wired:http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2009/10/first-look-dysons-blade-free-wonder-fan-blows-our-minds/"The unit is essentially one of Dyson’s vacuum cleaners working in reverse. The gray base station sucks up air and forces it through the circular blue thing that sits atop the rig. When the air jets through the front of the
  • #1
pixel01
688
1
Here is the news:
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21/20091013/ttc-dyson-launches-bladeless-fan-e1d36ba.html [Broken]
Who can explain to me what is behind the fan?

Thanks
 
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  • #2
The fan is in the base - it pushes air through the circumference of the ring where it comes out along the axis through tiny holes.
The idea is a smoother airflow and no whirling blades - so quieter and safer
 
  • #3
There's a write-up on Wired:
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2009/10/first-look-dysons-blade-free-wonder-fan-blows-our-minds/

"The unit is essentially one of Dyson’s vacuum cleaners working in reverse. The gray base station sucks up air and forces it through the circular blue thing that sits atop the rig. When the air jets through the front of the circle, it creates a suction behind and to the sides that draws more air through the loop and makes the fan more powerful. Dyson claims the Multiplier increases pressure 15-fold and spews 118 gallons of air every minute."

"The Air Multiplier will go on sale on this fall and will cost $300 - $330."
 
  • #4
That is an insane amount for an air inducer with iPod styling. This is one item I will wait for the Chinese to get a hold of and reverse engineer for 1/10th the price. I give Dyson credit for his vacuum, but he is losing touch with reality.
 
  • #5
So the thing isn't really blade-less is it? Its just that the fan itself is housed in the base. Wouldn't a regular fan be a lot more efficient (along with cheaper) than one of these iFans?
 
  • #6
Topher925 said:
So the thing isn't really blade-less is it? Its just that the fan itself is housed in the base. Wouldn't a regular fan be a lot more efficient (along with cheaper) than one of these iFans?

The inventer just wants to have a smoother fan for the first reason.
 
  • #7
I know. I can't think of how many times I have sat in front of a fan and said "Gee...I wish the flow from my fan was smoother."

The only things he's got going are possible energy savings and safety.
 
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  • #8
I'm assuming that the moving air lowers the pressure in the centre thus dragging in more air to move with it.

Looking at this, I'm wondering, can the same principle be applied to an electric current. Could a small DC electrical current be applied in such a way as to creates a current flow 15 times more greater?
 
  • #9
Not quite.
It drags more through the hole at low speed by having a very high speed airflow at the edges - you don't gain any extra airflow. In fact it's less efficenct because of the energy lost as the high pressure air expands out of the small holes.

In electrical terms it's like short circuiting something - you get a lot more current flowing at a reduced voltage. But you don't get something for nothing
 
  • #11
OK, technically the "bladeless" claim is false, but functionally (i.e. as a user uses it), it is true. I think that is a valid claim, since he's selling a product, not an engineering design. All the user-focused things relevant in a bladed fan do not exist in this device. And that's what's important.

Tell me, would anyone likewise cry foul at the claim that a hovercraft is a wheelless vehicle? I could probably find hundreds of wheels in a hovercraft, yet...
 
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  • #12
Still, what a conversational piece to have.
 
  • #13
DaveC426913 said:
OK, technically the "bladeless" claim is false, but functionally (i.e. as a user uses it), it is true. I think that is a valid claim, since he's selling a product, not an engineering design. All the user-focused things relevant in a bladed fan do not exist in this device. And that's what's important.

Tell me, would anyone likewise cry foul at the claim that a hovercraft is a wheelless vehicle? I could probably find hundreds of wheels in a hovercraft, yet...

I don't really think you're talking apples and apples here. Sure, in a hovercraft, there may be wheels that support secondary systems and such; the wheels aren't integral to the concept and idea of a hovercraft.

When I think of a fan, or even an "air moving device" that has claims of "bladeless", then I sure as hell don't expect circular ducting sitting on top of a normal desk fan.
 
  • #14
Well zero emission vehicles have emissions - they are just hidden somewhere else that you can't see them. Same principle really.
 
  • #15
minger said:
I don't really think you're talking apples and apples here. Sure, in a hovercraft, there may be wheels that support secondary systems and such; the wheels aren't integral to the concept and idea of a hovercraft.

When I think of a fan, or even an "air moving device" that has claims of "bladeless", then I sure as hell don't expect circular ducting sitting on top of a normal desk fan.

My point is that, as a product, it is a bladeless fan.

It does not operate like a bladed fan; it does not have the dangers or annoyances of a bladed fan. (Also, I'll bet dollars to donuts it is not a normal desk fan in the base.)

He's selling a product, not trying to wow physics buffs with some alleged new technology.
 
  • #16
I'm not trying to argue for the sake or arguing, but I guess this does bring a decent conversation in claims. At what point does it go from bladeless to blades then?

Right now a fan drives flow through a perforated torus (essentially), and we call it bladeless.

If the torus becomes simply a torodial opening, is it still bladeless? What if the opening becomes circular, essentially making it a ducted fan, is it still bladeless? What if the ducting shortens to just a protective shroud over the blade?

To me, it's analagous to saying that things like biodiesel and hydrogen are clean energy, when it requires an abundance of "dirty" energy to make them.
 
  • #17
I think I'll still stick with the "rip off" label myself.
 
  • #18
FredGarvin said:
I think I'll still stick with the "rip off" label myself.
What is it being ripped off of?
 
  • #19
DaveC426913 said:
What is it being ripped off of?
I mean a rip off in terms of $300 for a cheap fan.
 
  • #20
FredGarvin said:
I mean a rip off in terms of $300 for a cheap fan.

How do you know it's cheap?
 
  • #21
DaveC426913 said:
How do you know it's cheap?
Please. It's a DC brushless motor in a plastic housing with a plastic hoop on the top.
 
  • #22
DaveC426913 said:
My point is that, as a product, it is a bladeless fan.

It does not operate like a bladed fan; it does not have the dangers or annoyances of a bladed fan. (Also, I'll bet dollars to donuts it is not a normal desk fan in the base.)

He's selling a product, not trying to wow physics buffs with some alleged new technology.
Yes its probably a centrifugal blower, required to generate the extra static pressure. If you see a $300 sc
ulpture fine but I see a $300 fan that is inferior to my $12 desk fan. I also see advertising that DOES intend to imply technical superiority.
 
  • #23
Also advertising the performance in the nonstandard units of gallons per minute can only be an intentional effort to mask truly pathetic performance. It wouldnd even be a passable PC case fan.
 
  • #24
I worked for a company that did some work for Dyson. They have (or had) a lot of really bright engineers.
The original vacuum cleaner is amazing - it doesn't compare to the later bagless knockoffs, I immediately went out and bought one.
Their washing machine was ok but wasn't really worth the 2x markup. the more recent stuff is just marketing.

I think this is definitely aimed at the ($Money > $Sense) crowd, but it might be amusing for your cat to play with.
 
  • #25
I own a Dyson vacuum and I give them credit for that. It's the best vacuum (and the most expensive) I have ever owned.

I did have to laugh at the GPM performance. I gave them benefit of doubt in that how many people know what an SCFM is? Heck, I know engineers that have a tough time with that.
 
  • #26
x-posted from Mechanical Engineering forum:

That makes me wonder - could similar principles be used to come up with a bladeless wind turbine? Some environmentalists are concerned that wind turbine blades could pose a hazard to birds. I'm wondering if Dyson's approach couldn't be used to rectify that?

Also, many residential areas might have zoning laws against things like wind turbines, but if they could be made bladeless then perhaps they might be exempted from such restrictions.

So rather than being an "air multiplier", I suppose it would be an "air concentrator".
Is such a concept possible? If so, would such a device prove to have comparable efficiency to standard wind turbines?
 
  • #27
The big issue I would see with that is that the inducer requires a high velocity jet to entrain the extra air. On such a large scale that may not be economically possible and may create a lot of aero noise.
 
  • #28
This is not bladeless, blade is in the bottom. The only truly bladeless designs I know of are magnetohydrodynamic drives for ships and submarines (which only work in sea water) and the ION air purifiers...

I do like the design of this fan though, I would pay up to $29.95 for one.
 
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  • #29
How long until Chinese-made knockoffs appear?

And what are the limitations on this design? Could you have a giant ceiling fan of this type?

Could you turn it into a CPU-fan or power supply fan for your PC or laptop?

Could this thing be used in a propulsion system, to propel a vehicle and give it lift?

Could it work in water or a similar liquid?
Could it propel a ship, or a submarine, or motorboat? Sometimes you hear about whales or manatees being cut by propeller blades from boats. Could this be a cure for that?
 
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  • #30
sanman said:
How long until Chinese-made knockoffs appear?

And what are the limitations on this design? Could you have a giant ceiling fan of this type?

Could you turn it into a CPU-fan or power supply fan for your PC or laptop?

Could this thing be used in a propulsion system, to propel a vehicle and give it lift?

Could it work in water or a similar liquid?
Could it propel a ship, or a submarine, or motorboat? Sometimes you hear about whales or manatees being cut by propeller blades from boats. Could this be a cure for that?

Chinese knockoffs in 5...4...3...2...1

It looks like it uses a venturi effect to me. High pressure and low volume air drags in surrounding air to become low pressure and high volume.

I don't see why it couldn't be scaled up.

My leaf blower has an optional attachment on the discharge nozzle designed to funnel ambient air into the air stream, and does seem to greatly increase overall air volume.
 
  • #31
sanman said:
x-posted from Mechanical Engineering forum:

That makes me wonder - could similar principles be used to come up with a bladeless wind turbine? Some environmentalists are concerned that wind turbine blades could pose a hazard to birds. I'm wondering if Dyson's approach couldn't be used to rectify that?

Also, many residential areas might have zoning laws against things like wind turbines, but if they could be made bladeless then perhaps they might be exempted from such restrictions.

So rather than being an "air multiplier", I suppose it would be an "air concentrator".
Is such a concept possible? If so, would such a device prove to have comparable efficiency to standard wind turbines?


Hey, I think I found something - a wind turbine without big blades:

http://greenlivingideas.com/topics/alternative-energy/wind-energy/generation-wind-turbine-produces-3-times-power [Broken]

It seems to concentrate the flow of wind into a smaller cross-sectional area, and vaguely resembles a jet engine.
 
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  • #32
I don't know if that's for real, but the description in the link is pure nonsense:
The fundamental flaw in every wind turbine is that none of them actually speed up the air...
No.
The current systems extract less than 50% of the wind’s energy and are only working about a third of the time!

According to Dragonfly, the nature of the new turbine’s inner wing design increases the air speed to create more power – up to three times the average of a standard wind generator.
50%*3=150% efficient? No.
The chambers act as defusers so by the time the air reaches the third chamber, the smallest, the air inside is moving as fast as the air outside.
Uh, diffusers diffuse. They decrease air velocity, they don't increase it! By definition!
The nacelle of the Dragonfly was inspired by the technology of the SR 71 Blackbird, with a unique nose cone capable of expanding over 600% in size, increasing or decreasing the air speed and flow passing through the unit.
No, that's not what the SR-71 inlet cone was for. The SR-71 inlet cone basically just ensured that the cone shaped shock wave generated by the tip of the cone hit the inside of the inlet. The shock wave gets tighter as the plane accelerates, so the cone moves out.

From the picture, it looks like a jet engine - it looks like they are claiming the first three stages are fans/compressors that pull air in and accelerate it while the turbine is at the back. That can't happen.
According to Dragonfly Industries, two computer dynamic fluid (CDF) tests on the design were completed by an independent software company, SolidWorks, and the results are promising for moving forward with prototypes.
Solidworks is a software company, not an engineering company. They don't do the analysis for you!

Also, a simulation isn't a test.
and proves that more than 59% of the wind’s power can be harvested with the right design.
Uh - above it said that a typical turbine is 50% efficient and that this generated 3x more power...
 
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  • #33
That article was written by someone who has no clue but likes being the mouthpiece for a questionable start up company. 3X power? Please...
 
  • #34
russ_watters said:
No. Uh, diffusers diffuse. They decrease air velocity, they don't increase it! By definition!

No, that's not what the SR-71 inlet cone was for. The SR-71 inlet cone basically just ensured that the cone shaped shock wave generated by the tip of the cone hit the inside of the inlet. The shock wave gets tighter as the plane accelerates, so the cone moves out.

Solidworks is a software company, not an engineering company. They don't do the analysis for you!

haha, those are the first things that jumped out at me too.
 
  • #35
mgb_phys said:
The fan is in the base - it pushes air through the circumference of the ring where it comes out along the axis through tiny holes.
The idea is a smoother airflow and no whirling blades - so quieter and safer

Yes, I buy one chinese "Shanzhai", more quieter and safer.
 

1. What is the technology behind Dyson's bladeless fan?

Dyson's bladeless fan uses Air Multiplier technology, which draws in air through the base and then amplifies it to create a smooth, powerful stream of air.

2. How does the bladeless fan work without any visible blades?

The fan's motor is located in the base and drives a small impeller, which draws in air and pushes it through a narrow opening in the circular loop. This creates a jet of air that is then amplified by the surrounding air, producing a smooth and powerful stream.

3. Is the bladeless fan safer than traditional fans?

Yes, the bladeless fan is considered safer because there are no visible blades that could potentially cause harm. The air is also not chopped and disrupted like in traditional fans, making it a safer option for children and pets.

4. What are the advantages of using a bladeless fan?

There are several advantages to using a bladeless fan, including its sleek design, quiet operation, and energy efficiency. It also provides a more consistent and powerful airflow compared to traditional fans.

5. Are there any downsides to using a bladeless fan?

One potential downside is the higher cost compared to traditional fans. Additionally, the bladeless fan may not be as effective in cooling larger rooms or spaces. Some users may also find the lack of a visible blade less aesthetically pleasing.

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