Love these installs, a flea market id go to a lot as a kid have safer made air masters and a ton of Caribbean breezes along with 4 cast Dayton’s and 3 48” prolines in Brown. I don’t know why but whenever I see different industrials installed together I get flea market vibes.
Honestly same. I've mentioned the place we had here years ago with all the different types of industrials installed many times, it was the same kind of thing. Huge warehouse discount store/flea market kind of thing. What's interesting there is I think all the fans were probably purchased direct from the factories as some sort of liquidation or overstock, it would explain so many different types being installed in one place. Evidently the guy who started it just bought random leftover crap from factories all over Asia and resold it here for whatever profit they could get. I so wish it still existed.
Its amazing i cant wait to see the full display on low medium and high;);) Or i would like to see in the place of caribean breeze i would like to see 3 evergo:)
Cole, why are there 36” industrials installed in such a large space at 2:05, when there should be 56” industrials installed there to have more airflow. And also, having 56” industrials will cover more space
The 36" fans are being infilled with motor storage around them; I don't want 56" fans taking up a bunch of valuable space. Each large fan would eliminate probably 4 or more other motors that could be hung in their proximity. That'd be a dozen motors at minimum that I wouldn't be able to store on the ceiling, a significant number. The only reason 56" fans are installed back here at all in the one area is because I don't have another matching set of smaller industrials.
A number of things. First and foremost, though, an aesthetic low speed is always at the forefront of what I want to achieve. I don't have any spare capacitor-based controls that would have possibility of creating a nice low speed with just this fan on it, so that was a major consideration. This fan has often been on a variable control in the past and I knew it played pretty well as far as noise was concerned. If it was going to be super noisy I'd probably sacrifice a nicer low to have it quiet, but that wasn't a problem here. I also wanted this location to be pretty fine-tunable for when (if) I (ever) get my fan cleaning setup in place along the wall below it. Never know what I might need to help dry parts, provide a certain level of air movement for something, etc. I'd prefer to have the others on variable, but the Caribbean Breezes are noisy with one, and they work well with the 4 speed slider. Thankfully the NuTones do as well, because I didn't want two different types of controls next to each other in that location. Not sure what I would've done if that hadn't worked out, it's what I tried first and it just worked to my tastes.
Eventually I hope to have a cleaning station back there with a large commercial sink. I actually need something like that to clean larger portable fans, I don't really have a way to do so otherwise since my parents moved into this house. I used to clean box fan grilles and such in the basement shower at their old house, which had a flat floor where I could scrub. The fan being installed back there is simply pre-planning for that, as I will want some air movement when I clean there sometime in the future.
It's not common for any kind of fans to spin at the exact same RPM when on the same control. In this case, the slower fan has stiffened up a bit which greatly impacts the low speed, and there may be an additional power factor or a slight loss of capacitance as well. It seems to me that the first fan coming off the control always runs faster, but I'm sure it's more than one factor here causing it to go so significantly slower.
Love these installs, a flea market id go to a lot as a kid have safer made air masters and a ton of Caribbean breezes along with 4 cast Dayton’s and 3 48” prolines in Brown. I don’t know why but whenever I see different industrials installed together I get flea market vibes.
Honestly same. I've mentioned the place we had here years ago with all the different types of industrials installed many times, it was the same kind of thing. Huge warehouse discount store/flea market kind of thing. What's interesting there is I think all the fans were probably purchased direct from the factories as some sort of liquidation or overstock, it would explain so many different types being installed in one place. Evidently the guy who started it just bought random leftover crap from factories all over Asia and resold it here for whatever profit they could get. I so wish it still existed.
Great video! Love the installs!
Its amazing i cant wait to see the full display on low medium and high;);)
Or i would like to see in the place of caribean breeze i would like to see 3 evergo:)
Cole, why are there 36” industrials installed in such a large space at 2:05, when there should be 56” industrials installed there to have more airflow. And also, having 56” industrials will cover more space
The 36" fans are being infilled with motor storage around them; I don't want 56" fans taking up a bunch of valuable space. Each large fan would eliminate probably 4 or more other motors that could be hung in their proximity. That'd be a dozen motors at minimum that I wouldn't be able to store on the ceiling, a significant number. The only reason 56" fans are installed back here at all in the one area is because I don't have another matching set of smaller industrials.
curious what made you pick variable speed for the one fan but not the others! If you dont mind my asking!
A number of things. First and foremost, though, an aesthetic low speed is always at the forefront of what I want to achieve. I don't have any spare capacitor-based controls that would have possibility of creating a nice low speed with just this fan on it, so that was a major consideration. This fan has often been on a variable control in the past and I knew it played pretty well as far as noise was concerned. If it was going to be super noisy I'd probably sacrifice a nicer low to have it quiet, but that wasn't a problem here. I also wanted this location to be pretty fine-tunable for when (if) I (ever) get my fan cleaning setup in place along the wall below it. Never know what I might need to help dry parts, provide a certain level of air movement for something, etc.
I'd prefer to have the others on variable, but the Caribbean Breezes are noisy with one, and they work well with the 4 speed slider. Thankfully the NuTones do as well, because I didn't want two different types of controls next to each other in that location. Not sure what I would've done if that hadn't worked out, it's what I tried first and it just worked to my tastes.
I think an Airmaster would look cool here
Wonder why there is one far behind and not where the others are?
Eventually I hope to have a cleaning station back there with a large commercial sink. I actually need something like that to clean larger portable fans, I don't really have a way to do so otherwise since my parents moved into this house. I used to clean box fan grilles and such in the basement shower at their old house, which had a flat floor where I could scrub. The fan being installed back there is simply pre-planning for that, as I will want some air movement when I clean there sometime in the future.
Why one of the prolines on the lowest setting it speed faster than the other one and also on high:)
It's not common for any kind of fans to spin at the exact same RPM when on the same control. In this case, the slower fan has stiffened up a bit which greatly impacts the low speed, and there may be an additional power factor or a slight loss of capacitance as well. It seems to me that the first fan coming off the control always runs faster, but I'm sure it's more than one factor here causing it to go so significantly slower.
@@vfandm understand my frend thank you a lot for the information;)