dodge man
Super Star Member
I think the logic of fan blowing up during the winter  is the hot air up high gets forced down at the edges of the room and washes down the walls to get down lower in the room.  Or so I’ve read.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			Almost never works as folks imagine it should. The trouble is that most houses have insulated ductwork running thru unconditioned space, with an air handler also in a cooler basement or attic, and it's sucking in air that's only maybe 80 - 85F from the ceiling above the stove.
The losses going thru the cold ductwork are enough that the air blowing out the other end is too cool.
If you happen to design your own house and place all ductwork and air handler inside the insulated envelope, then of course it can work, and I know at least two people who did exactly this. But in any house you didn't design specifically for this purpose, it's usually a losing battle.

Even with high ceilings, up is often preferred. Either direction does the same job of breaking up stratification, moving cold air up to displace the hot down around the perimeter of the room, or forcing the hot air straight down. But the reason people prefer upflow in cold winter is that it avoids having any air blow straight onto you, making you feel colder when it's not excessively warm.Down during the cold months and off during the warm/hot months.
This is due to a very high 'cathedral' ceiling.
True! But people often don't like the feel of 70F air blowing onto them out of heating registers. Heck, I remember older people around here complaining about air a little warmer than that blowing onto them from registers, when people first started converting from furnaces (120 - 140F) to heat pumps (90 - 110F).This can no doubt be true in some cases WinterDeere, but even if the 85* air near a return drops 15* before being distributed to the cooler rooms it's still removing warm air from where it's too hot, and moving it to rooms that are cold so win win.
Also true! But wood stoves have pretty limited firepower, so most of us heating by wood are doing all we can to avoid putting heat into any space other than our primary targets. Most "large" stoves hold only 700k BTU of hardwood, and while you have some control over the rate at which that's doled out, pushing for higher outputs means shorter burn times and more frequent need for reloads. I'm usually damn tired of reloading stoves by mid-winter!And the 15* that is "lost" is warming a basement, unheated wall cavity, etc. Of course if warming a vented attic it's wasted.
True! But people often don't like the feel of 70F air blowing onto them out of heating registers....
So yes, you're pushing even colder air out of the room, which does heat the home. But it might still be uncomfortable for anyone in the room subjected to that airflow, unless you have a variable speed air handler and can dial down the velocity to reduce this effect.
Also true! But wood stoves have pretty limited firepower, so most of us heating by wood are doing all we can to avoid putting heat into any space other than our primary targets. Most "large" stoves hold only 700k BTU of hardwood, and while you have some control over the rate at which that's doled out, pushing for higher outputs means shorter burn times and more frequent need for reloads. I'm usually damn tired of reloading stoves by mid-winter!
I find the look positively ghastly!This can no doubt be true in some cases WinterDeere, but even if the 85* air near a return drops 15* before being distributed to the cooler rooms it's still removing warm air from where it's too hot, and moving it to rooms that are cold so win win. And the 15* that is "lost" is warming a basement, unheated wall cavity, etc. Of course if warming a vented attic it's wasted.
In my case all ductwork within the house walls, floors, and crawl space is encapsulated in foam so it really works well for me. This shows some of the ductwork in the crawl where the air handler is.
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That is the best solution. If you have a ducted forced air furnace, just run the furnace far to move the wood stove heat throughout the house. Once I discovered that, I quit using the ceiling fans.
I agree. The objective with running the furnace fan is to distribute the air, not necessarily blow hot air . It takes the excessive heat from the room with the wood stove and moves air throughout the house. In order to work well, you need to program the fan to run at least every 30 minutes for awhile and leave it running 24/7.This can no doubt be true in some cases WinterDeere, but even if the 85* air near a return drops 15* before being distributed to the cooler rooms it's still removing warm air from where it's too hot, and moving it to rooms that are cold so win win. And the 15* that is "lost" is warming a basement, unheated wall cavity, etc. Of course if warming a vented attic it's wasted.
In my case all ductwork within the house walls, floors, and crawl space is encapsulated in foam so it really works well for me. This shows some of the ductwork in the crawl where the air handler is.
![]()