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Your cart is empty.4.4 out of 5 stars
- #15,543 in Tools & Home Improvement (See Top 100 in Tools & Home Improvement)
- #51 in Household Ventilation Fans
Brian kuna
Reviewed in the United States on March 8, 2025
Very powerful and quiet
Greg Chamberlain
Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2025
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Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2025
I have a hall bathroom with a high output showerhead and 2 boys that love taking long showers. The bathroom would turn into a steam room. Already had what I thought was a decent in-ceiling exhaust fan. The excess steam ultimately created a serious mold problem on the ceiling. After cleaning up the mold problem, I took a different approach and put this exhaust fan in my attic. The flow rate of this fan is simply awesome. Sucks out all the steam instantly. Not more mold problem in this bathroom. Highly recommend.
That Matt Guy
Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2025
I did not use this for the typical use case I have seen for this product. Where most are using for plants I am using it to pull fresh air from a vent I put in a soffit then through 6 inch duct to a filter box that holds a 14x20x1 filter, then this fan, then a vent into my office. I was worried if it used IR I would not be able to control it as its on the other side of the drywall in a crawl space, however the remote works perfect.In addition to it working though walls which was a primary use case it also moves an incredible amount of air. I run it for 12+ hours at a time and I am showing no degradation after months of use which was a concern. Out of a 6x12 standard HVAC vent I am getting 12mph wind using my Pyle PMA82 Digital Anemometer. I have it pulling from a filter box so if you didnt use a filter box with a MERV 14 filter it likely would move even more air. I estimate for my office which is about 500 sqft with 9 ft ceilings I am swapping all the air in about 20 minutes. I measure CO2 in my office and it went from 1200+ to 540. I can also use it during the day when its 65ish outside to keep my office around 72 degrees which is pretty impressive as 3 walls and the ceiling are outside walls and in TN even in Feb the sun can heat things up. No need to use the AC.Very happy with the performance of this fan and the remote. I do need to figure out what frequency it uses so if something happens to the remote I can replace it. I have a flipper zero so I might see if it can see what its using.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2025
It’s not as strong as I thought it would be, don’t expect it to perform well as a dust remover in a work shop. Good enough to create a little ventilation for a shed or garage or maybe if you’re smoking a cigar in your garage it will suck out the smoke, but that’s about it!!! It had 2 speeds & it’s actually quiet, but should have went bigger.
Salah
Reviewed in Canada on February 2, 2025
A bit loud, but this thing moves air
Tim Hering
Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2025
Using for our DTF printer, shaker and curer. Not loud, its efficient, small enough in size to not be awkward for installation, enough power to connect a T extension for above shaker then for one to extend over curer. Great purchase, appreciate the remote.
Matt
Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2025
I am using this fan on a long run of duct to help pull air from our bathroom. I installed the fan 16 inches from where the duct exits the attic wall. I mounted the fan on a wood block with a foam pad to reduce vibration. I like how the fan can be removed to clean by loosening the clamps. The fan moves a lot of air. The fan is louder than expected, but we cannot hear it in the attic.
St. Paulite
Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2024
This fan is not quiet, but you can make it quieter.I wanted to vent two rooms: A very small powder room (30 sq ft), and a laundry room (70 sq ft). I removed the existing NuTone fan motor, leaving the "box" and 4" duct attachment [see pic] connected to an existing insulated flexible line to the roof vent. Then I cut a 4" hole in the laundry room ceiling and installed an adjustable vent fixture [see pic] I bought at a box store.I ran 14/2 romex wire from the NuTone box to an electrical box I installed on a truss member [see pic]. That eliminated the need to install a new on/off switch.The fan mounted to the truss member just above the electrical box. The fan & motor part of the fan assembly detaches so it was easy to attach the fan base plate to the truss. I marked the air flow direction with a Sharpie because there are no directional indications on the fan itself. After plugging it in, I found it too loud, with some of the noise coming via vibrations thru the base plate. I cut off a 4"X6" piece of neoprene from my wife's yoga mat [Caution: Get wife's permission first!], and drove four 2" deck screws thru it and into the wood.I used 4" round clamps to attach the duct line to the fan case. There is plenty of room to do that. Then I added HVAC duct tape to attach the duct insulation to the fan body.I put a PVC "tee" in-line and connected an 8' section of insulated ducting to the new laundry room vent [see pic].Conclusions:- Adding the neoprene pad, and insulated duct line to the fan reduced the noise level significantly! The fan location is above our Family Room and we cannot hear it.- The fan construction is flimsy. I've installed Fantech fans before, and they are MUCH beefier and sold. They also cost 4X as much for the same amount of airflow.- The airflow is good. I put a paper towel up to each vent and it drew well at each. It silently pulls moisture from the laundry room, and odors from the powder room.- It is easy for a DIYer to do. In my situation, I use the existing fan switch in the powder room (4' from the laundry room) as the single on/off for the fan. I didn't install a timer because it draws so little power, and is so quiet, I don't care if I accidentally leave it on all night (only twice so far!).
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