I'm looking for two industrial drum type fans for my shop, they need real bearings not oil soaked fiber pads. The last smaller one i picked up still works but goes off kilter every few minutes because the oil pad bearings aren't accessible to oil.
Don't put castors on it, it will just roll away in the wind!I have the squirrel cage fan from my old furnace. I had planned to hang it from the trusses in my new detached garage, and size the pulleys to make it run slow and just move enough air to provide some natural cooling/air circulation. Would I be better to mount casters on it so I can move it around the shop floor instead?
Our Big Assed Blackjack's move a heck of a lot of air at low sound levels. Running at full speed, you can stand with your head against the guard and have a conversation at normal voice levels.The problem with big fans...... ANY big fans, is they're noisy. There is no way around this. When you start moving a lot of air molecules by having big steel blades smashing into them at a high rate of speed, it's going to make a lot of noise. The higher the RPM they turn, the more noise they're going to make.
I found this one on Amazon. Says it's rated for 20 amps.Can you post a link to that rotary switch?
If you can make sense of the wiring go for it. I prefer belt driven fans, the motors are easily replaceable, and pulley size determines speed.I spotted this in our alley this weekend.
I bought one at Costco a few weeks. Found it to be of high quality and does a nice job moving air so far.I saw a DeWalt-branded drum fan for sale at Costco today. Not gigantic -- probably 32-inch-ish -- but a decent size. I forgot to go back and check the price, but knowing Costco it was a Chinese product at a good price. I got a Stanley-branded fan at Costco for my shop a few years ago and it's been working continuously for probably four years.
