Is there any engineering or manufacturing reason why every make and model of a fan*, from ceiling to box to portable, have their settings arranged to that in the title?
It annoys me that it’s not the reverse (On/Off : Low : Med : High), as it seems like common sense; you’d turn it on, and gradually dial up the fan’s speed. But as it stands now, you have ramp down after turning it on, or ramp up to turn it off, Imagine if the volume knob on your stereo worked this way. It’d drive you batshit.
*That I’ve come across. I’m sure someone will link to a counter example.
Funny, I was wondering if it had something to do with capacitance. Although, it annoys me so much, I’d almost rather have a very slow start than cycle through it in reverse.
Anyhow, my bad for being lazy and not searching. Thanks!
Also, as the fan gets older dust gets in and grease thickens, so the starting torque provided by slow speed may not be enough to actually start it moving. This risks the fan being turned on, on low, and the user not even knowing it is trying to run, which might cause the motor to over heat. Starting at max power gets things moving and then you can lower the speed with the shaft already rotating.
Here you go: My Bionaire BW2300 cycles off-low-med-high. But even if you don’t go past low when you turn it on, it initially spins up to high and then cuts back to low. Thanks to your thread, I now know why.
It’s a nice fan, but I don’t find the thermostat feature useful at all. You can set it at a temperature, and if it gets hotter than that, the fan kicks on. In my experience, usually if the room is warming, it’s because it’s even hotter outside, and the last thing I want is the fan speeding that up. I would love to find a relatively inexpensive fan that I can tell, “If the room temperature is above 65, and the outside temperature is cooler, turn yourself on.”
I have a Black and Decker column fan, I guess you’d call it. It has a remote control. It has separate on, off, and speed buttons. And a couple more. So I can hit start and it’ll start on high.