I How to move cool air down through a house?

  • I
  • Thread starter Thread starter Tylercc
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Air Cool
AI Thread Summary
To effectively move cool air from the third floor to the living room on the second floor, fans should be positioned to create a downward airflow, ideally using powerful fans at the staircase to enhance circulation. The use of ductwork from a furnace can also help in routing cool air during summer. An evaporative cooler can significantly lower temperatures, especially in low-humidity areas like Aurora, CO, where it can help maintain a comfortable indoor climate. Creating a convection loop by ensuring proper air paths between levels can facilitate better airflow, with an extractor fan at the bottom potentially improving efficiency. Overall, strategic fan placement and airflow management are key to cooling the house effectively.
Tylercc
Messages
27
Reaction score
2
so I am trying to move cool air from my room on the third floor to the living room on the second floor, but it does not seem to be working as well as I would like it to. I have the windows open and fans pointing "in" upstairs while downstairs they are pointing "out". Do I need fans directing downstairs? thanks in advance.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Fans do not "suck in" air. They can only blow air in a specific direction, but this air comes from everywhere around them. Unless your fans upstairs are outside the window (or in the window and you close the rest of the window), they won't do much.

How warm is it where? If there is a large temperature difference between the house and outside, convection can do the heat exchange on its own - but then you also get in hot air on both floors. A purely internal heat exchange could work as well - fans mixing the air at the staircase.
 
  • Like
Likes russ_watters
so I do have the fans in the window, I live in aurora,co and it is suppose to get to 90 today. So it sounds like if I have powerful fans directing the air on the stairs down to the windows in the living room I may get some better results? thanks
 
Do you have a furnace and duct work running throughout the house? If so, you could re-purpose the duct work during the summer to route cool air by using blowers...
 
Aurora is located in a high plains dessert - has low humidity. I have successfully used a swamp cooler that operates by adding moisture to the air. Locate a portable (Home Depot or Lowes) in an upstairs window and open a window on lowest level. Moist air will displace drier air below. Works well spring through fall. A more expensive but great fix is to locate one on the roof with a water supply and have ducts on the upper floor. In fall you can reverse air flow and suck cooler air to the roof. But an expensive install, usually. - Jim
 
With a bit of engineering: attach a long hose to the fan, run it from upstairs to the lower floor, close the windows.
 
As long as you have all other windows and doors shut except for the two with the fans then you should be drawing ambient outside air into the upstairs room, cooling it, delivering it to the bottom floor and a out through your lower window just as you expect.

Possibly, the heat flow into the lower floor due to the higher outside air temperature and and sun radiant heat conducting through downstairs exterior walls and windows may be exceeding the rate at which your fans can circulate the cooled air to the bottom floor.
 
So the room is so cool because of the evaporative cooler that I have in there (70), and while I was not expecting that it could cool the entire house down I was hoping for somewhere in the 75-78 range, but it is definitely better than the 99 outside. Thanks for the advice
 
You need two paths between the two levels if you want effective circulation. As mentioned above, you will need at least one duct - the stair well can supply the other path. Cool air from an upstairs window is slightly more dense than the warm air downstairs. Given a bit of encouragement you can start a convection loop but you give things a chance to get started. You can get a bubble of cool air in the 'out' tube that will sit on top of the warm air beneath. An extractor fan at the bottom of the 'heat out' tube would probably be better than at the top because of the directed output flow. Once convection has started, it may even sustain itself as the walls of the exhaust tube warm up.
Careful choice of where you put the exhaust outlet. Away from the prevailing wind.
 
Back
Top