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  2. Cool Your Patio Off With the Best Outdoor Ceiling Fans

    www.aol.com/best-outdoor-ceiling-fans-cool...

    $329.95 at wayfair.com. Cassius Outdoor Ceiling Fan. Hunter is a top name in ceiling fans and lighting, and this model—priced at about $120 at the time of this writing—is an excellent choice ...

  3. Ceiling fan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceiling_fan

    Ceiling fans were proven to have a more significant effect on the droplet and airborne transmission when the coughing infected person is located directly under the ceiling fan. Ceiling fans offer better protection from cough exposure for people located closer to the fan center, where the directed airflow changing particle trajectory downward to ...

  4. PSA: You Need to Change the Direction of Your Ceiling Fan for ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/psa-change-direction...

    Conventional ceiling fans typically have a physical switch that's located in the middle of the fan near the pull string and lightbulb. Flip it either up or down to change the direction of the fan ...

  5. Casablanca Fan Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casablanca_Fan_Company

    Comfort•Touch was the first ceiling fan control system to utilize a radio frequency remote transmitter (previous handheld remote systems offered by other manufacturers used infrared transmitters, much like a TV remote.) It was also the first ceiling fan control system to integrate an LCD display into the user interface (transmitter). [4]

  6. Fan (machine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_(machine)

    A ceiling fan is a fan suspended from the ceiling of a room. Most ceiling fans rotate at relatively low speeds and do not have blade guards because they are inaccessible and unwieldy. Ceiling fans are used in both residential and industrial/commercial settings.

  7. Punkah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punkah

    These small handheld devices are still used by millions when ceiling fans stop working during frequent power outages. In the colonial age, the word came to be used in British India and elsewhere in the tropical and subtropical world for a large swinging fan, fixed to the ceiling, pulled by a punkah wallah during hot weather. [1]

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