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Post by Deleted on Apr 14, 2004 18:10:37 GMT -5
the housing is not shaped like that. The face of the motor sticks through the housing. Is it plastic? Do you have a picture of it?
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Post by Andrew G. on Apr 14, 2004 20:43:21 GMT -5
Is it plastic? Do you have a picture of it? Yes, it was plastic and no, I don't have a pic of it but I do still have the decorative plate.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 15, 2004 13:56:22 GMT -5
Yes, it was plastic and no, I don't have a pic of it but I do still have the decorative plate. I dont recall any Emersons with the decorative plate on plastic. Must have been an transition model.
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Post by Andrew G. on May 3, 2004 5:20:47 GMT -5
I dont recall any Emersons with the decorative plate on plastic. Must have been an transition model. I've got pics of the plate incase you're interested. This may be a little off topic but when did fasco cancel out the variable speed control on the "World's Fair" fan?
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Post by brian H on May 3, 2004 13:15:53 GMT -5
No, andrew i wasn't talking about the shape of the fan that i posted, i was talking about the switch that was on there (like on the old r-52's) the levoiler i think it is.
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Post by Andrew G. on May 3, 2004 16:51:17 GMT -5
No, andrew i wasn't talking about the shape of the fan that i posted, i was talking about the switch that was on there (like on the old r-52's) the levoiler i think it is. No, My question was when did fasco stopped using the variable speed control on the world's fair fan.
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Post by Deleted on May 3, 2004 20:31:58 GMT -5
World's Fair was variable speed. State Fair and Vanity Fair were three speed.
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Post by Andrew G. on May 3, 2004 20:44:18 GMT -5
World's Fair was variable speed. State Fair and Vanity Fair were three speed. I knew that. When did they stop using the variable speed control? A person I know has a 52'' antique brass one and it has a variable speed control. They said they got it in 1990.
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Post by Deleted on May 3, 2004 21:34:40 GMT -5
I knew that. When did they stop using the variable speed control? A person I know has a 52'' antique brass one and it has a variable speed control. They said they got it in 1990. Ryan Sipka would know for sure, I dont. My 1993 (or is it 1992) catalog still has pictures of variable speed fans in it, but they're only offered in three speed.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 27, 2004 23:09:18 GMT -5
I was driving by a recently remodeled car (repair) garage by my house and could have sworn I'd seen a rare blenderfan. From the road, it appeared to have a K63 motor, standard blenderfan flywheel, but the blades were long, tapered, and extremely narrow, much like the blades on the Heat Fans. I thought, wow, an early heat fan, never seen this before, and how come I never noticed it driving by this garage before?
I pulled in closer and both questions where answered. It was a standard K63 blenderfan, but they'd stuck the blades from a new Menards industrial on it. In fact, I'd seen the new industrial, they'd had it in the office/front counter but replaced it with the curved-blade industrial from Hampton Bay. I also noticed there were in fact several other blenderfan motors with no blades hanging elsewhere in the garage. So apparently they'd always had these motors, the blades got lost in the remodeling and they eventually put a spare set of blades on this one. I'm going to go in there one of these days and offer to buy the motors, or sell them the correct blades.
On that note, anyone know what the first Heat Fans were like? I know where there's an early one I should got get a picture.
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