CobyRupert
Super Member
OP, maybe a pic would help. I only know of stove-top fans that work by heat convective flow and have NO electric parts.
Wires to electric motor can be seen
OP, maybe a pic would help. I only know of stove-top fans that work by heat convective flow and have NO electric parts.
OK, you are not joking. So i will help out. Notice i responded to the “radiant heat” part. It is not radiant heat. Fans blow convective heat.You've never seen a blower mounted on the back of a stove?
I have yet to see a front mounted blower on a stove.
That type fan needs heat to function.
So the answer is to set it where it is hot.
The hotter the setting spot, the faster the fan spins.
The faster it spins, the more hot air it blows……
Sorry, revised my post. But you want the maximum heat differential to get the maximum fan speed. That would be as my revised post says.This is why I based on question on stove top being uniform heat temperature. Assume fan motor gets same voltage applied to it no matter where placed on stove.
With equal voltage to motor, fan might SPIN faster pulling and pushing hot un-dense air, (if at front of stove) but will it move as many pounds of air?
Conversely, pulling cold dense air (fan at back) may make fan turn slower, but is it actually moving more pounds of air?
OK, you are not joking. So i will help out. Notice i responded to the “radiant heat” part. It is not radiant heat. Fans blow convective heat.![]()
A stove produces HEAT Period! Produced as elevated temperatures on the exterior panels of the stove.what comes off a stove so a fan can move? A stove only can make radiant heat...it takes another energy source to convert it to convective heat.
Go play pong with someone else.