Running a fan on an inverter

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Jan 5, 2009
40
Hunter 28.5 Lake Lanier
Does anyone know the power consumption of one of these Honeywell table top fans?

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0000DJ27M

I've search and even downloaded the owners manual but I can't find anything.
I don't have access to the actual fan; it's on the boat.

Does anyone have an opinion about running it on a inverter over night?
 

larryw

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Jun 9, 2004
395
Beneteau OC400 Long Beach, CA
At max power, I don't see it pulling more than a couple amps, say three, for eight hours is only 24 AH, and if you have a moderate house bank, I think you'd be OK, but know that in general any time you turn a motor or heat an element, power draw must be taken into account.
 
Sep 25, 2008
2,288
C30 Event Horizon Port Aransas
Why don't you want to run 12 V fans and skip the inefficientcy of inverting?
The design of the blades count for alot when it comes to how much power is consumed vs how many cubic feet per minute of air is moved. And that's where you will find the price difference in 12 V fans.
Do you already own one of those honeywell fans?
 
Jan 5, 2009
40
Hunter 28.5 Lake Lanier
Why don't you want to run 12 V fans and skip the inefficientcy of inverting?
The design of the blades count for alot when it comes to how much power is consumed vs how many cubic feet per minute of air is moved. And that's where you will find the price difference in 12 V fans.
Do you already own one of those honeywell fans?
Yeah, I already have one of those fans. That's part of the reason for asking.

I looked at some 12v fans and they seem a bit over priced to me. Especially if the word "marine" is anywhere near them.

My boat is pretty small and it's alread becoming a bit cluttered. I'd prefer to have just one fan. Not one for the dock and one for the hook.
 
May 6, 2004
916
Hunter 37C Seattle
I run a "house" fan with a diameter of about 8-10 inches thru a plug in inverter from the cigarett lighter type 12v outlet when away from the dock. So I don't see a problem.
 

paulj

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Mar 16, 2007
1,361
Catalina 310 Anacortes,Wa
If the fan is white then .45 amps + .12 amps = .57 amps

.57 amps x 8 hours = 4.56 amh

If the fan is black add 10 %.

20 fans x $ 70 = $1400 :+1:

I think the Honeywell is just fine....it just depends where you are standing.


paulj:troll:
 
Oct 22, 2008
3,502
- Telstar 28 Buzzards Bay
Umm... first, that is a 110 VAC fan, and if it draws two amps, that means it is a 200 watt device...which I doubt. That also means it draws 20 amps at 12 VDC.... not accounting for inverter losses, and running it for eight hours is 160 amp hours.

I'd guess that the fan probably draws more like 55 watts, or .5 amps at 110 VAC... based on a fan here in my office that is about the same size. That means it draws 5 amps at 12 VDC or 40 amp-hours for an eight hour run overnight. :) Compare that to a Caframo Bora fan, which draws .25 amps at 12 VDC, and you could run 20 of them for what that Honeywell fan would draw. :)

Whether this is okay or not, really depends on the size of the battery bank and what kind of charging equipment you have.

At max power, I don't see it pulling more than a couple amps, say three, for eight hours is only 24 AH, and if you have a moderate house bank, I think you'd be OK, but know that in general any time you turn a motor or heat an element, power draw must be taken into account.
 
Dec 2, 2003
1,637
Hunter 376 Warsash, England --
I have a small 6" oscillating fan on my desk right now and the plate on the underside reads 19 Watts so this would mean a couple of amps from the battery plus whatever the inverter draws when unloaded.
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,701
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
It draws a LOT

Does anyone know the power consumption of one of these Honeywell table top fans?

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0000DJ27M

I've search and even downloaded the owners manual but I can't find anything.
I don't have access to the actual fan; it's on the boat.

Does anyone have an opinion about running it on a inverter over night?
It would certainly not be my first choice. The Honeywell fan you show draws 3.6A at 12 volts running through a very small 150 watt inverter. On a bigger inverter you'd likely see less efficiency.

3.6A X 10 hours of run time is 36Ah per night. Now multiply times two nights at 72 ah's and you've used nearly the entire capacity, to 50% depth of discharge, of a 200 ah bank while out cruising.

Remember that when cruising, and charging via alternator only, you'll rarely if ever put back in any more than 80-85% of charge state so a 200 ah bank with 100 usable to 50% becomes a 60 hour bank when away from the dock for any length of time.

200Ah X .80 (or 80%) equals 160 available usable Ah's at an 80% re-charge. If the bank is only say 200 ah's, and you don't want to discharge below 50% for battery life/longevity, then you'll have only 60 available real usable ah's per charge unless you run the motor for hours and hours on end to get back to 95-100%..

3.6A is a lot of current for a fan. My Bora Caframo can run 10 hours and burn only 2.5Ah's and your is consuming 3.6Ah's for every hour it is run. Is the Bora expensive? Yes, but less than a battery bank upgrade..;) RV fans tend to be slightly less money but do still draw more than the Bora..'


Oops almost forgot the proof... Here's the pic..

 
Jan 5, 2009
40
Hunter 28.5 Lake Lanier
What are the chances that Maine Sail has hooked an ammeter up to the exact fan that I have on my boat?

Amazing!
 
Dec 19, 2006
5,818
Hunter 36 Punta Gorda
Walmart

Walmart has cheap fan with a clap that plugs into 12v cigarette lighter plug for about I think $9.00 or $12.00
 
Jul 20, 2005
2,422
Whitby 55 Kemah, Tx
Walmart has cheap fan with a clap that plugs into 12v cigarette lighter plug for about I think $9.00 or $12.00
Yes, and it's a lot stronger than the $60 marine fan out now days (I have both). Bad side is it only has one speed.
 
Jan 3, 2009
821
Marine Trader 34 Where Ever I am
Get one or two Caframo open face fans, Home Depot for about $30.00, Worst Marine about $50.00, and you can plug it into a 12 volt outlet or hardwire it. Runs at about 1/2 amp, has two settings and moves a lot of air. Ours last for about 5 years but they get used a lot. Chuck
 
Sep 25, 2008
2,288
C30 Event Horizon Port Aransas
You can get a 12V fan from Home Depot? the same one that maine is talking about?
 
G

Glenn G California Delta

12 Volt Fan

I just purchased one of the Ocean Breeze fans from Camping World for $60. While that is expensive in my book for a fan, when it was 111 out and I was having that warm air blast me it was worth every penny. I also have the Hella for localized air movement in the berths, since they are so power efficient and can run all night. While the Hellas are great in the berths, I found them inadequate in the salon. While you could run your 110 volt fan on an inverter, what is the reasoning for not wanting to switch to 12 volt? If you're only going to have one fan, why not make it 12 volt so you could use it while docked or out?

As for power consumption, the Ocean Breeze is a pig, consuming 3 amps on high. When my friend ran his on high all night it drained his 2 battery house bank by the next morning. The upside is it took longer for this powerful 12 volt fan to drain the batteries than it took when he a had a house fan wired through an inverter.

One more item, I think the Ocean Breeze will move substantially more air than your Honeywell. My guess is if it's a short night, and you start with fully charged batteries, you should make it through the night with the Honeywell or the Ocean Breeze, but you might be well advised to have an isolated starter battery.
 

MrBee

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Dec 30, 2008
425
Irwin 34 Citation Middle River, Md.
Yeah, I already have one of those fans. That's part of the reason for asking.

I looked at some 12v fans and they seem a bit over priced to me. Especially if the word "marine" is anywhere near them.

My boat is pretty small and it's alread becoming a bit cluttered. I'd prefer to have just one fan. Not one for the dock and one for the hook.
Don't buy the 12V at a marine store get the one at an auto store. I bought a fan at Pep Boys for less than $16.00 and it can be permenantly mounted or Clamped on with a spring clamp. Has an inline switch and can be pluged into a cigar lighter plug...or cut the wires and direct wire.

Bee
 
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