Fix a NOISY CEILING FAN Oil Bearings EASY Step by Step How to install squeaking grinding wire light
Вставка
- Опубліковано 19 лют 2020
- How to OIL the BEARINGS of a CEILING FAN to FIX loud NOISY sounds like squeaking grinding scraping EASY install step by step guide wire light
- Навчання та стиль
Fan Oil with Dispenser Bottle: amzn.to/2Z0fV5N
Useful tool for oiling the bearings.
Thanks
(paid link)
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Dabbing with a Q-tip saturated in oil might be another simple way to apply it.
good video, just would've been nice to hear the fan prior to oiling; so could be compared with after. Thanks!
was going to say the same thing
@@hippa2dahoppa2 fuchsia
Seek seek seek seek
Zik zik zik zik
Lol
Here's your comparison, grinding bearings and then no noise
He said squeaking and grinding a few times throughout. Pretty straight forward - any noise not suppose to be there. Great video!
HOLY CRAP! I thought this was a joke at first. Why don't they make these things easier to oil? Having an easy to access oil port that could be filled without having to take everything apart and shut off the electricity would be a god send!
They don't want you to be able to oil them in this day and age, they want you to go buy a new one. Greed
My exact thoughts. Is this a joke? I’m thinking I’ll go with tightening any loose screws and spray wd40 all over, cross my fingers and hope it doesn’t die.
Same reason they made CVT transmissions for cars.
@@dominiqueh6790 How'd that work out for you? I have a very similar model to the fan in the video (although mine's 15ft high), and there are holes at the top that I sprayed wd40 into (I aimed for the bearings). The grinding sound stopped, but the fan doesn't turn as fast as it used to. Maybe once it dries out a bit, it will, but I may have ruined the fan lol. I'll have to get a big ladder to do it properly.
@@samguest580 it actually worked out fine! 8 months strong.
dang man, I just want to drip some oil. shutting off the power and taking down my fan to get to the bearings of the motor, is something i may fail to re-assemble and have it fall on my head and kill me later, since I often mess up first, then learn from my mistake. I can't afford to learn from a fan falling onto my head. However, I'm probably going to have to hope for the best and do it.
Yep, I hear ya.
just hire someone to do it.
Hope you didn’t die, man.
Green Recycle Tip for my school:
If your mom or wife colors her hair , a good bottle to oil is the hair coloring mixing bottle, it has the same spout! Hope I get an A!
My ceiling fan is about 21 years old and I just started hearing a grinding/scraping noise. I believe that oiling the bearings would indeed solve my problem. But at this point, if I take down my old ceiling fan I will just install a new nicer one. Thanks for the video. 🙂
You can replace the bearings. 6202zz
Just use the crap, they use for undercoating cars. Krown Rust is good anything that's thin. Fluid Film is too thick.
Thanks for the video! A medicine dropper also works well for applying the oil. I was able to get my particular flush mount fan done without disconnecting the wires.
Straight to the point, very helpful. Cheers!
Omg! Thanks. This is the fan we have. Just going to get another one.
Just finished putting it back up after oiling. It's perfectly silent now. Thank you!
You need to use PTFE resins not oil.
Your solution is good, noise is gone, you're good doctor😀👍🙏
Great video Sir! I’m a renter and going to be doing myself!😳shhhh don’t tell! Heck I fix everything for five years that’s within my ability just because who can change out toilet tank guts,re-adhesive the soap dish in shower,re-chalk the shower,fix broken door jam. Just give her a receipt for anything spent. Have a fantastic day
*Easy install, so far Works great **Fastly.Cool** !*
Excellent video, your simple visual and non-complicated steps toward fixing the fan was great. I've a fan that occasionally makes noise but if I wiggle the fan left/right it seems to at least temporarily balance (?) and make the noise/squeak go away. I'm not sure if it is in fact the bearings...but I'll try it. Thanks for taking the time to video this procedure.
great video easy to understand thank you.
Mine is doing the same thing. Great video. Super helpful.
Many have replied saying that before fixing the fan we could have heard the noise. But my feeling is that let's all believe him!
Thanks for the video and tip. How about Sewing Machine Oil, can I use this (as I don't have motor oil)..? Thanks.
Do not know if this will work for me but looks like a good start. thanks for sharing.
Thanks. I think that is my issue as well and will try your fix.
Quick and easy video!
Our living room ceiling fan is who-knows-how-old, and it’s developed some bearing rattle. Our dining room ceiling fan, with four blades (LR fan has five), and a 10 inch shorter span, has a significantly longer spin-down, too. This is very helpful! I wish this could be done with it in place, though.
Great 👍🏽 explanation thanks
Da da da dat da daaaaaa‼️
Way ta go . I know this will work for my fan too thanks.
My fun jus stop making noise after following the video . Thank you very much.
Was thinking of buying a new one but I jus stopped. Hahahaha
Thanks for video, my fan cause actually just its lid cover.
Good job!
Is there any problem if i use machine oils
Thanks it was helpful but I used a cooking oil, is that one okay for it?😊
Ha! About 2 weeks ago I quit using my living room ceiling fan because it was starting to make a grinding noise. The only problem is that it is at the mid point of my vaulted ceiling, so it is 14 - 15 feet! My bedroom fan makes a light noise when it is on it's lowest speed. That one I can reach by standing on the bed, luckily. So I'm going to give this a try! Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us! Keep warm tonight.
yeah its a pain to take the whole fan down from the ceiling. Usually the bearing making the noise is the top one and its hidden under the shroud. Luckily they only need to be oiled after 10 to 20 years. Thanks.
@@FunBubble OK, good to know that. Yeah, the fan in the living room is over 25 years old. But the bedroom fan is less than 2 years old, even though it is a Hunter brand. They don't make things like they used to. Great video & thanks again!
how long before you needed to oil it again. Most bearings are sealed. good video and thanks i will try it on my 20 year old ames special ceiling fan
Great work! How do I put it all back???
Appreciate your video...I just fixed an awful squeak that started years and years ago,and it just got unbearable a couple nights ago. Followed your instructions on a similar 25 yr old fan. It literally runs like new.
One thing I would do differently, use less oil...Our bedroom smells just a little bit like the Gas Monkey Garage,
grease in bearings dries up and causes wear and it gums up bearing. This will work to extend the bearings, sometimes quite a long time, but eventually they will wear out. If you are skilled enough to pull the motor apart you can pull the bearings and replace them. They are just pressed on the shaft. There should be a number stamped on the shield of the bearing. Get that number and if you have calipers measure the id (bore) of the bearing. SOMETIMES the bearing with the same number will have several different bore sizes. (Special bore bearing) otherwise you may end up with the wrong bore.
6202zz
Slick 50 Durablube oil or Krown Rust spray is what to use
I bet i can press the bearings out and replace them. If I'm already this deep, might as well go all the way!
Fans should come with zerk fittings for maintenance IMO.
Grease is not a good lube. You want to use a light oil with no detergents like 3-in-one oil.
Thanks my problem ended up being a single slightly loose fan blade
Can it be done without taking it apart ?
Hi. Im new to yr channel I like the way you explain...could you record a video on installing a ceiling fan with it lights but controling fan and lights with 2 gang switches...please
Thanx 4 Share 👍
very professionable video
Good job
I am happy the grinding noise did not make the little bearings scratch up. So cool you saved the old fan and did not have to buy a new one.
Regency ceiling fans are amazing
I would have like to have heard the noise it was making before you oiled it,
Just wanted to give a follow up with my fan, well I bought a new one lol
@@Biker758210 Lmao
@@Biker758210 same. none of these videos are showing the noise and if im taking it off the ceiling then fuck it for $60 i can get a new one
Thanks
I would say, if you have it, add a SHORT piece of heat-shrink tubing of the same color wire onto the wires you connect that don't match colors (red and blue). That way you will always know in the future or when exhausted or whatever. I know it's the only 2 that didn't match, but there may be something else you work on, which has a wire or 2 that is not in use, along with 2 mismatched colors that go together, which could cause you to connect a not-in-use wire to the mismatched color one instead, since those 2 colors also don't match. This could also be a hidden wire that becomes unhidden when re-connecting.
A free-option is to just take pictures or video with your phone while doing it.
Very good idea. Or, use duct tape to mark them, like I do.
Can you use cooking oil ?
Thanks a lot. I fixed my ceiling noise yesterday. It’s been over 20 years old without any maintenance.
I think your fan deserves maintenance. Like bearing change
@@bhoot1702 The fan is of very good quality. I installed it myself. It’s quiet for 20 years until recently. I felt that replacing it would have taken me more time. So, I took it off and oiled it. It worked as before. Hope that it would last another ten years 😜
Ok that is way more than I feel comfortable doing myself. Is there another way to easily lubricate it without disassembling it?
Not really. I have tried oiling my ceiling fans while still hanging, and the problem is there are two bearings. You can not get oil to the lower bearing without taking the fan down. Once you flip the breaker switch for the room the fan is in, or the fan's breaker switch, it is easy to do.
I just let the oil run down from the top. No disassembly required.
Can we oil without removing the fan.
Nice👏
I'd suggest if you know nothing about wiring before you dissasemble to take a photo of how its wired or write down the connections so you can put back together easily!
My 6-yr-old fan started getting this weird noise and i didn’t do anything.. a month later, the fan just won’t rotate. I removed the blades and it started working again but the rotation is so slow.. i tried to put oil into the bearings but it didn’t help. Then i changed the capacitor (same 1.5uF) but the rotation was still slow and it’s still not rotating when I reinstalled the blades.. what could be the issue? :( is it safe to try installing a 2.0uF capacitor?
just get a new fan. that sounds like a piece of shit. especially if it’s not running after a capacitor replacement.
Superb
Small job for big out come save $$$$ 👍 approved ✅
Would bearing grease be better than using oil?
itd be hard to get the grease inside the bearings. the oil will seep inbetween the bearing carrier and race. A few drops of oil will last 10 years or more inside the bearing. They start to make noise after it totally dries out.
Thanks for the info. Just looks like to much work someone like me that doesn’t have that handyman touch. I can do a few things but when it comes to electricity I’d rather let someone with more knowledge than me plus a 60-100 dollar fan won’t be a dent like getting electrocuted or getting the fan to fall on me while I’m sleeping. But thanks for the info anyway. Cheers!
Bravo bravo
Thanks for the detailed video, but not everyone can take the whole fan down...
I just grease the ball the fan hangs from and solves the squeak
1:21 He missed!! ... he never misses..
A Before and After would have been nice. Because for all we know, it could have been quite to begin with.
I oiled it before. The oil spilled all over when u switch on the fan and make a mess.
Old technology was just as good as old people
It lasted Longer
But these days generation
Intentionaly make things very fragile and not Long lasting
Jus for Business
Old people Gem
What?
@@TheDogDad are you native speaker?
seems like you don't get it.
I'm 99% certain this is the same issue with my ceiling fan too. I wish I wouldn't have to go through all those steps. Looks like it's gonna take about an hour or so.
Same, did you get this fixed? How long did it take?
Can you use lithium grease?
That's what I was thinking. I know it would last longer. I am going to try it. Rather than take the entire thing apart, I am going to gease a swab and put it up through the holes and see if I can get the noise to stop that way. Worth a try - b4 I completely take everything apart. There are just too many moving parts that need to go back together perfectly. It's worth a try. I hope I can get rid of the squeaking. If I do HAVE to take it apart then this vid seems easy to follow. I appreciate that he had good lighting and went through it step by step explaining exactly what he was doing.
we can use cooking oil ?
No!
Did you oil both bearings? Or only one?
i oiled both bearings, the top and bottom.
Fan name?
My ceiling fan makes a high frequency sound when the blades turn and it is driving me nuts. Please help...
Buzzing or SCREEEEEEEEE
That is a Regency ceiling fan
Isn't there a way to do it without removing the whole fan and wires?
Nevermind just looked at my fan that I'm going to oil soon and looks like I also have to remove the whole fan and wires
Replace both bearings 6202zz
My dad has WD40 in a spray can and we sprayed the bearings 😬
Let’s see the fan with 4 blades instead of 5
You need to use PTFE resins not oil
Good video but I just rather buy another one 🤔🤔
Same
Why not wd-40?
it's usually lubricated with oil but you can try WD40 or WD40 Silicon spray. Anything is probably better than having to replace the fan.
I have read NOT to use detergent containing oil. I see that you used one with detergent. Explain your reasoning, please. I'd like to se detergent oil because it is all I have on hand, but am hesitant.
That's not how you turn a breaker back on. You push the breaker outwards and then inwards.
Changing the bearings would have been an even more durable fix. It will cost around 7 dollars to buy a set of good quality bearings and install them. It might last 26 years again. But it will atleast last 15 years!
SKF is the world's best bearing company.
You mean Timken bearing … right
My fan makes a loud grinding noise and wont move very much, maybe 10% speed. Left it on for 15 seconds to see if it would start but I started to smell the motor burning so I turned it.
The fan spins just fine going the other direction too. Do you think I have a more serious problem than just lack of oil on the bearings? Maybe I should just get a new fan, I've always wanted one with a remote lol
sounds busted. I'd replace with new.
@@FunBubble thanks for responding, I'll just get a new fan
Could be a capacitor. Get the # of wires and microfarad uF of each and you can order online for about $10. Easy to change if you are a 2 out of 5 for handiness.
@@ThomasJSweet thanks!
That oil your using is for cars you should bye buy 3 in 1 oil that is meant for fan motors
Engine oil works better. 3 in 1 oil doesn't last long.
Will 5w 20 work or should I get 5w30?
@@meganmiller1612 anytime your oiling electric fans you should use 3 in 1 fan oil for fan motors
For the price of these fans, I have to say they are awfully attractive. $50 and fashionable. Everyone compliments our fan🥰😌😎
Can you just use WD40
WD40 isn't a very good lubricant, really. It'll work for a little while and then the squeaking will be worse than it was to begin with. It's just not designed for this sort of thing.
WD40's good for cleaning parts and getting screws unstuck. It'll lubricate things for a short while, which might be all you need sometimes. Something like a ceiling fan needs a proper oil.
Muy complicated
If you were gonna bring it down why not clean it when it's off
Looks great, and with a brighter bulb installed that’s all the light you need. ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxWF88GpljEn-0o34vtLFazEQ5h5Q33SjU As far as ease of installation- this was my first ceiling fan and it took about 3 hours because I had no idea what I was doing and also it’s helpful to have a second set of hands and a magnetic drill bit. Works great.
My fan dont hang like this. It is against the ceiling!
The house wasn't built around the fan. It's still on a hangar of sort.
you can fix a ceiling fan.
Yes
turn power breaker off BEFORE doing anything else.
You don't have to take the whole fan off to oil it...
Just use a WD spray with a straw like nozzle spray. No need to dismantle.
You want to use 3 in one oil. A light oil with no detergents. WD is a solvent not a lubricant.
@@bobsoft From WD website
lubricant.
Myth: WD-40 Multi-Use Product is not really a lubricant.
Fact: While the “W-D” in WD-40 stands for Water Displacement, WD-40 Multi-Use Product is a unique, special blend of lubricants. The product’s formulation also contains anti-corrosion agents and ingredients for penetration, water displacement and soil removal.
Comments: Thanks anyway.
@@shananarocks google wd40 ruined my fan motor and I think you'll see why their website doesn't mention using it to lubricate electric fan motors.
The newer ceiling fans will have a sealed bearing so your would never have to oil it
Thanks, pepsicolachao. Would you have any idea of approximately what year ceiling fans started being built with sealed bearings, as opposed to the older style that have 'felt oil washers'? I realize that's probably hard to nail down, and it might vary from one manufacturer to another, so perhaps the only alternative is to pull my 'hummer' down to see how it was constructed and then either repair or replace.
Because they intend for you to always buy a new fan every 10 years or so. Go ahead and oil it occasionally.
I am pretty sure the one here is sealed also. They just don't seem to have the 10 year life.
Now I see why no one does this.
Oh, good grief. I wanted to oil my fan WITHOUT disassembling or turning of a breaker.
Almost easier to buy a new fan.
Not your fault, but the basic homeowner shouldn't have to disassemble and turn off a fuse to oil a fan.
And working above your head makes everything three times as difficult. I've a 40-year-old Hunter fan that I oiled maybe 10 years ago and again today, by just squirting a lot of oil into a couple of holes above the motor. Apparently, the fan spins on a ball bearing sitting in a puddle of oil.
@@keithnichols7926 Yeah thanks I was thinking something simpler than what he did is possible!
Bro my fans mount to a 25 ft ceiling. Its easier to buy new and reinstall lol
You've cleaned it real well, not real good. English teachers everywhere rejoice! Nice video.
Lol 😂😂😂 this ain't SO YOU THINK YOU CAN FANCE💃💃🕺🕺
Removes fan from ceiling... trash. Install new fan. No disassembly required lol