I have this on three radiators in my house. It’s an old phone charger connected to a temperature controlled switch connected to a bunch of old 120mm computer fans. The fans are connected using a couple of 3D printed brackets and some old insulation trim provides anti vibration damping. The phone chargers put out around 9 volt, but sag to around 7 under load. This ensures the fans always start, but don’t turn at full speed to keep the noise down.
Except for the temperature controlled switch I built it all using parts I already had kicking around in my project bins. So fully recycled to prevent waste. The temperature controlled switches are the bi-metal kind, so fully hardware controlled. When the temperature is low they disconnect so use zero power. As soon as the temperature comes up to the set point, they switch on and the fans start. When the temperature drops down, the fans stop. These were $10 for 10 pieces, so a minimal investment.
I don’t have data on how much they help, I have a full home automation system that measures power and gas used, solar produced, temperatures, on times for the heating etc. But in the end there are simply too much variables. However my subjective experience is the fans help the radiators a lot, the heat spreads out way faster. The theory says the fans should help, so I thought I’d give it a go with some old parts.
I have this on three radiators in my house. It’s an old phone charger connected to a temperature controlled switch connected to a bunch of old 120mm computer fans. The fans are connected using a couple of 3D printed brackets and some old insulation trim provides anti vibration damping. The phone chargers put out around 9 volt, but sag to around 7 under load. This ensures the fans always start, but don’t turn at full speed to keep the noise down.
Except for the temperature controlled switch I built it all using parts I already had kicking around in my project bins. So fully recycled to prevent waste. The temperature controlled switches are the bi-metal kind, so fully hardware controlled. When the temperature is low they disconnect so use zero power. As soon as the temperature comes up to the set point, they switch on and the fans start. When the temperature drops down, the fans stop. These were $10 for 10 pieces, so a minimal investment.
I don’t have data on how much they help, I have a full home automation system that measures power and gas used, solar produced, temperatures, on times for the heating etc. But in the end there are simply too much variables. However my subjective experience is the fans help the radiators a lot, the heat spreads out way faster. The theory says the fans should help, so I thought I’d give it a go with some old parts.