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Why Bladeless Fans Are a Lie

Bladeless fans can look like magic. How does all that air come out of that empty ring?! Well, it turns out that bladeless fans are more like a conventional fan than you might think, but that doesn't mean there isn't some really cool science behind how they work. Hosted by: Olivia Gordon SciShow has a spinoff podcast! It's called SciShow Tangents. Check it out at https://www.scishowtangents.org ---------- Support SciShow by becoming a patron on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scishow ---------- Dooblydoo thanks go to the following Patreon supporters: Alex Schuerch, Alex Hackman, Andrew Finley Brenan, Sam Lutfi, D.A. Noe, الخليفي سلطان, Piya Shedden, KatieMarie Magnone, Scott Satovsky Jr, Charles Southerland, Patrick D. Ashmore, charles george, Kevin Bealer, Chris Peters ---------- Looking for SciShow elsewhere on the internet? Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/scishow Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/scishow Tumblr: http://scishow.tumblr.com Instagram: http://instagram.com/thescishow ---------- Sources: http://simon.traberg-larsen.dk/website/documents/projects/2014/cfd.pdf [PDF] https://opentextbc.ca/physicstestbook2/chapter/bernoullis-equation/ https://cosmosmagazine.com/technology/how-do-bladeless-fans-work https://www.jameco.com/jameco/workshop/howitworks/dysonairmultiplier.html https://www.core77.com/posts/25610/How-Does-a-Dyson-Air-Multiplier-Work https://electronics.howstuffworks.com/gadgets/home/dyson-bladeless-fan.htm https://media.lanecc.edu/users/driscolln/RT112/Air_Flow_Fluidics/Air_Flow_Fluidics7.html https://archives.nbclearn.com/portal/site/k-12/flatview?cuecard=46849

SciShow

5 years ago

♪ Bladeless fans can look like magic. We’re so used to spinning fan blades pushing air at us that an empty, windy ring just doesn’t compute. But the truth is… bladeless fans are a bunchof liars. There’s actually a more conventional fan hidden within every model — but the sneaky engineering isn’t what makes them cool. It’s that even though there are blades, they’re not where most of the wind comes from. The blades that everyone looks for when they see a bladeless fan are hidden in the base, where
a small fan blows outside air up toward the empty ring. The air escapes from a tiny slit cut around the inside of the ring, and it’s guided toward the front of the fan by angled walls: The ring is slightly thicker in the back than the front, so air from the slit goes toward the thinner part. The problem is, if that was the only reason these things worked, they wouldn’t really create a solid cylinder of air. You’d just get a circle of wind, like some sort of never-ending smoke ring. In reality,
there’s wind coming from the center of the fan, too. And that doesn’t come from the blades in the base. It comes from outside the ring. Part of the explanation has to do with pressure. See, when you turn on your fan, a stream of fast-moving air comes out of the ring. And according to an effect known as Bernoulli’s principle, the faster a stream goes, the less pressure it exerts. That means your fan creates a zone of low pressure inside the ring. So any air sitting behind it gets pushed toward th
at zone by the higher atmospheric pressure around it. This is called inducement, and it’s part of how you get air coming from the center of the fan even though the slit is in the outside of the ring. The rest of the wind comes from entrainment. This is where the stream of air coming out of the fan drags some of the surrounding air along with it, thanks to the air’s viscosity. Basically, the molecules outside the stream try to stick to the ones inside of it, so get pulled along for the ride. Betw
een inducement and entrainment, a bladeless fan can blow about ten or twenty times more air than it takes in through the base — all with the moving parts hidden from view. I mean, that doesn’t make up for the fact that the “bladeless” part isn’t quite true. But the way it works is still fascinating. Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow! If you want to learn more about the cool science behind the seemingly-ordinary things in your house, you can watch our episode about dimmer switches. Beca
use, surprise: They’re secretly strobe lights. ♪

Comments

@bdfloresa

We got this for the toddler room https://www.youtube.com/post/UgkxdzUap46p9ViXhKZf5mK_bXOb89EHxTqq because of the bladeless feature. Actually has a lot more power than I thought it would. Can still feel the air moving well 6 feet away, which is farther than I would expect from a desk fan. My daughter dropped twice and still works. I haven't checked out how long it lasts on a charge yet, but the air output was still good for the few minutes it was unplugged. My daughter also likes the color lights feature, but I don't really care for it and can be annoying to go through all the options before it turns off. Overall, happy with the purchase, especially for the price

@Digephil

best use I've seen for these is in Butterfly gardens. They heat them at up to 35°C, so the workers really like having a breeze, but they obviously can't have spinning blades of butterfly murder there.

@AmaraJordanMusic

My dad has one. It does work really well, but what’s most enjoyable is how the smaller cats like to jump through the hoop, and how the bigger one just shoves her paw into it and waves it around. 😂

@jurremioch316

Change the title to: ''How bladeless fans work"

@DehyaRhea

The only thing good about it is that it's safer for kids, but then again, I grew up with bladed fans and still have my 10 fingers so...

@KrolKaz

"Here is our new bladeless fan model!" " cool, how does it work?: " well you see, there is this blade down here.."

@SimplyElectronicsOfficial

I don't think the title of the video is fair. It gives what is an amazing feat of engineering a bad name.

@ExtraAmpersand

I just always assumed it blew air around exactly like a regular fan, but it really does use some really interesting physics & physical properties of air to do its job. Surprisingly fascinating from such a short video. This is why I love this channel :)

@user-vn7ce5ig1z

When Dyson's fan first came out, they claimed it worked by using magnetic fields to pull ionized air through, sort of like a rail-gun. ¬_¬

@shlushe1050

These fans also eliminate the choppy helicopter sound that normal fans generate

@sniperfox47

Bladeless fans are bladeless in the same way that "truly wireless" headphones are "truly" wireless. "Truly Wireless" headphones still have wires and traces on the insides that connect components, but they are called that because they have no wires visible to the consumer which may inconvenience the consumer. Bladeless fans are the same, it's not a statement that there are absolutely no blades in the fan at all, but rather that there are no blades visible to consumers that may harm them or those around them. Is this a bad/inaccurate way to frame the marketing? Probably. But it's not an isolated product type. It's the way this kind of marketing is handed across many different industries and it's something you have to be aware of when you're looking at these products.

@benevolentautore4463

This just in. Wireless headphones have wires inside them.

@MichaelSmith-ij2ut

So they're HIDDEN blades. These fan companies are missing out on some serious Assassin's Creed merchandising.

@MinutePlant

Alternative explanation: That time when you're a kid and you realize that when you blow through a straw from a distance the air from the other end is stronger, but when you blow through the straw while it's in your mouth less air goes through it.

@PACKERMAN2077

Bladed fan, level 1 boss Bladeless fan, level 20 boss Fanless blade, level 100 boss THAT HOW SCIENCE WORK!

@marcdraco2189

I love the way Dyson tried (and generally succeeded) in claiming he invented this thing - 30 years after Toshiba first created them!

@ForbidenNinja

But how efficient is this vs a conventional fan?

@arkajyotijha906

I think a "Bladeless fans don't work the way you think they do" would be a more apt title

@HTPCYMC

That’s how bladeless fans work.

@veryberry39

I was hoping this video was about why Dyson charges $500+ for a fan that doesn't actually work. Instead, I got to learn about how it's not the fan that's a lie, but the video's title.