TCL VERY LIGHTING via Amazon has
52" TCL Low Profile Ceiling Fan w/ 24W Dimmable Light & Remote Control (Black, White, or Brown) on sale for $129.99 - $59.80 when you apply promo code
ACLIGKHR at checkout =
$70.19.
Shipping is free.
Available:
Thanks to Sr. Deal Editor
iconian for finding this deal.
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Product Details:- 5 reversible blades
- Reversible DC Motor
- 6 Fan Speeds
- The 52-inch ceiling fan comes with an 24W dimmable LED light panel, offering adjustable brightness from 10% to 100%. Choose from three color temperatures—3000K warm light, 4500K natural light, and 6500K cool white light—to suit different settings like study rooms, bedrooms, or nighttime lighting needs.
- Powered by a high-quality DC motor, this low profile ceiling fan operates quietly at less than 35dB. It features forward and reverse modes: enjoy a cool breeze during summer to keep your space comfortable, and reverse the fan in winter to help circulate warm air and maintain an even temperature throughout the room.
- Note: It cannot be installed on a sloping ceiling.
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A ceiling fan is meant to do one thing. Move air. Its ability to make light, the color temperature and CRI of that light, its decorative aesthetic, it's decibel rating, etc. are all secondary attributes. When I see I listing for a ceiling fan that doesn't list its rated CFM, I tell it to go f@#* itself and I look for a real ceiling fan.
If it's in a bedroom, 4000 CFM is the bare minimum, 6000 if your hot. AC motor fans go "bzzzt, bzzzt, bzzzt" as they run, some people like it, like a nostalgic white noise machine. dc fans make no motor noise, and they use <1/2 the watts per CFM. Regardless, 2 out of 3 fans you put up will make some kind of tapping or clacking noise after 6 months no matter the motor type unless you go back in and correct the noise (it's usually a wire tapping on something, or a loose fan blade or loose trim). If it's in a big room or living room, shoot for 8000 to 10,000 CFM. more down rod = more air movement, more diameter is more air and more efficiency and less noise since it spins slower to move the same air, no replacement for displacement. Ensure the fan blades are a good diameter for the room, if you have in-ceiling lights make sure they don't "chop" the light and cast shadows on the floor or walls each time a fan blade passes under the adjacent light. If it's gonna be a primary light or it's over a dining room or board game table, ensure it's at least 90CRI or else green and blue will be hard to tell apart. Living room and bed room (chillin' rooms) are best at 2700k, 3000k is ok. 4000k or higher better be a bathroom, office, garage/workshop, or an overly futuristic white house. If it doesn't list it's CFM or if it wants an app or Wi-Fi access to control it then it can go f$#* itself it's not a real ceiling fan. hunter is not the name it used to be. I've had good luck with home decorators collection for cheap fans lately.
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A ceiling fan is meant to do one thing. Move air. Its ability to make light, the color temperature and CRI of that light, its decorative aesthetic, it's decibel rating, etc. are all secondary attributes. When I see I listing for a ceiling fan that doesn't list its rated CFM, I tell it to go f@#* itself and I look for a real ceiling fan.
If it's in a bedroom, 4000 CFM is the bare minimum, 6000 if your hot. AC motor fans go "bzzzt, bzzzt, bzzzt" as they run, some people like it, like a nostalgic white noise machine. dc fans make no motor noise, and they use <1/2 the watts per CFM. Regardless, 2 out of 3 fans you put up will make some kind of tapping or clacking noise after 6 months no matter the motor type unless you go back in and correct the noise (it's usually a wire tapping on something, or a loose fan blade or loose trim). If it's in a big room or living room, shoot for 8000 to 10,000 CFM. more down rod = more air movement, more diameter is more air and more efficiency and less noise since it spins slower to move the same air, no replacement for displacement. Ensure the fan blades are a good diameter for the room, if you have in-ceiling lights make sure they don't "chop" the light and cast shadows on the floor or walls each time a fan blade passes under the adjacent light. If it's gonna be a primary light or it's over a dining room or board game table, ensure it's at least 90CRI or else green and blue will be hard to tell apart. Living room and bed room (chillin' rooms) are best at 2700k, 3000k is ok. 4000k or higher better be a bathroom, office, garage/workshop, or an overly futuristic white house. If it doesn't list it's CFM or if it wants an app or Wi-Fi access to control it then it can go f$#* itself it's not a real ceiling fan. hunter is not the name it used to be. I've had good luck with home decorators collection for cheap fans lately.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GVQX5NH8/
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