soj
Well-known member
I think you should forget that 14" attic vent fan you posted. Not big enough to make any difference in a 1200 sq ft building. I have a 40' X 45' (1800 sq ft) and have a 36" exhaust fan at the roof line, across the shop from the roll up door.
I think it is rated in the 11-12,000 CFM range. If I go in the shop during the day after it has been closed up, it is hotter inside than out. The building is insulated. I open the roll up door, turn on the fan and it "cools out" the shop pretty quickly. Yes it is hot outside air, humidity and all, but that is what you have to deal with since AC is not in your budget. With the roll up door open, this fan does not create a "breeze" you can feel. It is exhausting the hot air that is building up from the sun on the walls and roof of the building. But to feel air movement I have to lower the door to force the same volume of air through a smaller opening. So when using the fan I try to do all work as close to the door as possible. Even two of those attic fans (3240 total CFM) will never create enough air movement that you can feel. They will remove hot air from the top of the building, but the exchange rate will be so slow they will be ineffective. IMHO, you would be wasting money. Also, the fan you posted does not have a shutter. I bought my fan from Northern Tool several years ago, it is not listed on the web site now. It is a two speed, which turned out to be useless. I thought the low speed would be good for mild days, and be less noise than the high speed. There is less fan noise, but more motor noise on low speed, and not enough air movement to help. Here are the same brand (J&D) of fans they have now. Not much detail info at Northern Tool, better info at the J & D site. Made in USA fans.
Good luck with whatever you decide to do, but get the biggest fan you can afford, and not waste money on something too small to be effective. If you can't afford a big enough exhaust fan, then get circulating fans like the HF fan you posted. BTW, when I was shopping for exhaust fans, I called J & D Mfg, and an engineer told me I needed three 36" fans to properly ventilate my shop. I thought he was just trying to sell more fans, but now I can see he was right.
-jp
I think it is rated in the 11-12,000 CFM range. If I go in the shop during the day after it has been closed up, it is hotter inside than out. The building is insulated. I open the roll up door, turn on the fan and it "cools out" the shop pretty quickly. Yes it is hot outside air, humidity and all, but that is what you have to deal with since AC is not in your budget. With the roll up door open, this fan does not create a "breeze" you can feel. It is exhausting the hot air that is building up from the sun on the walls and roof of the building. But to feel air movement I have to lower the door to force the same volume of air through a smaller opening. So when using the fan I try to do all work as close to the door as possible. Even two of those attic fans (3240 total CFM) will never create enough air movement that you can feel. They will remove hot air from the top of the building, but the exchange rate will be so slow they will be ineffective. IMHO, you would be wasting money. Also, the fan you posted does not have a shutter. I bought my fan from Northern Tool several years ago, it is not listed on the web site now. It is a two speed, which turned out to be useless. I thought the low speed would be good for mild days, and be less noise than the high speed. There is less fan noise, but more motor noise on low speed, and not enough air movement to help. Here are the same brand (J&D) of fans they have now. Not much detail info at Northern Tool, better info at the J & D site. Made in USA fans.
Good luck with whatever you decide to do, but get the biggest fan you can afford, and not waste money on something too small to be effective. If you can't afford a big enough exhaust fan, then get circulating fans like the HF fan you posted. BTW, when I was shopping for exhaust fans, I called J & D Mfg, and an engineer told me I needed three 36" fans to properly ventilate my shop. I thought he was just trying to sell more fans, but now I can see he was right.
-jp