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Rechargeable table fan vs ceiling fan during power cut – real test

Ceiling Fan vs Rechargeable Fan

We ran a side-by-side airflow test in a real Dhaka apartment – the results changed how we think about load-shedding cooling

Your ceiling fan is doing more than you think. Your rechargeable fan is doing less than it claims. Here is the full picture.

Updated: April 2026 · 12 min read · Verified by Gadgeterians Team

Quick Answer

A ceiling fan moves 3-5× more air than a rechargeable table fan of any price. During a power cut, you lose that ceiling fan entirely. A good rechargeable table fan (৳2,500-৳4,500) running at medium speed in a directed position – pointed at your face, not the ceiling – comes close to matching the perceived cooling of a ceiling fan for one person. For a whole room or for sleeping, nothing replaces the ceiling fan’s coverage. This guide covers exactly what the numbers show, how to position your rechargeable fan to maximise cooling, and which situations genuinely close the gap.

Every Bangladeshi home runs on ceiling fans for roughly 8 months of the year. They are cheap to operate, move an enormous volume of air, and cool a whole room at once. When load-shedding hits and the ceiling fan stops, the room heats up within minutes – and no rechargeable gadget fully replicates what you have just lost.

But the comparison is more nuanced than “ceiling fan wins, give up.” A rechargeable table fan used correctly – aimed directly at the person, placed at the right height, set to medium speed – creates meaningful personal cooling that makes a 2-3 hour outage tolerable. Used incorrectly – pointing at the wall, placed on the floor, running at full speed to drain the battery in 2 hours – it achieves very little.

We tested this with a real setup: ceiling fan at medium speed (speed 3 of 5) in a 12×14 foot Dhaka apartment bedroom versus three different rechargeable table fans at various positions and speeds, measuring air velocity at sitting height, sleeping height, and room centre. The results below are from that test, not from spec sheets.

If you want full rechargeable fan buying advice with specific model recommendations, see our dedicated top 7 rechargeable fans tested for Bangladesh guide. This article is specifically about the comparison – ceiling fan versus table fan – and what you can realistically expect from each.

In This Guide

  1. What a ceiling fan actually does – and why it is so hard to replace
  2. What a rechargeable table fan actually does – and where the spec sheet lies
  3. Head-to-head test results: airflow, coverage, perceived cooling
  4. The positioning test: how placement changes everything
  5. Speed vs runtime: the trade-off that matters most during long outages
  6. Situation-by-situation guide: when the table fan is enough
  7. How to get maximum cooling from a rechargeable fan during load-shedding
  8. What to buy: rechargeable fan recommendations at every budget
  9. Quick decision guide
  10. FAQs



1. What a Ceiling Fan Actually Does – and Why It Is So Hard to Replace

A standard Bangladeshi ceiling fan (48-56 inch, 70-80W) creates what engineers call a “wind chill column” – a downward airflow that distributes across the room when it hits the floor and reflects outward. This is why you feel cool anywhere in the room, not just directly below the fan.

The numbers behind this are significant:

SpecTypical BD Ceiling Fan (48″)What This Means
Air delivery (CFM)3,500-5,500 CFM at speed 3Moves 3,500-5,500 cubic feet of air per minute – enough to cover a 150-200 sq ft room
Coverage areaEntire roomEvery person in the room feels cool, not just whoever is directly in front of a portable fan
Power draw70-80W at medium speedVery efficient per unit of air moved – but requires mains power, which vanishes during load-shedding
Wind chill effect3-5°C perceived temperature dropEvaporative cooling from sweat on skin – this is the mechanism, not actual air cooling
Blade sweep height7-9 feet from the floorThe high position creates room-wide airflow distribution – physically impossible to replicate from a table surface

Why Height Changes Everything

A ceiling fan’s position 7-9 feet above the floor is not incidental – it is the mechanism. The downward airflow hits the floor and spreads horizontally, creating movement at sitting and sleeping height throughout the room. A table fan 2-3 feet off the ground creates a narrow cone of moving air. It cannot replicate distributed room coverage regardless of its own airflow output – the physics simply do not allow it. This is the fundamental gap that no rechargeable fan closes.



2. What a Rechargeable Table Fan Actually Does – and Where the Spec Sheet Lies

Most rechargeable fans sold in Bangladesh claim airflow outputs of 800-1,500 CFM on their packaging. In our testing, real-world performance for budget to mid-range fans was 200-600 CFM – roughly 10-20% of a ceiling fan’s output. Even the best rechargeable fans we tested peaked at around 900 CFM at maximum speed.

However, the CFM comparison alone is misleading in one important way: a rechargeable fan concentrates its output in a narrow, directed stream aimed at one person. When that person sits 1-2 metres directly in front of the fan, the airspeed at face and chest level can match or exceed what a ceiling fan delivers at sitting height in the same room. The difference is coverage – a ceiling fan cools everyone; the table fan cools whoever is in its path.

✅ What rechargeable fans do well

  • Directed personal cooling for 1 person at close range
  • Portable – move to any room, or use outdoors
  • Adjustable tilt – aim exactly where needed
  • USB-C charging – top up from a power bank
  • Sleep-friendly at low speed – quiet enough for light sleepers
  • Battery runtime of 6-14 hours at medium (verified models)

❌ What rechargeable fans cannot do

  • Cool an entire room – coverage is a narrow cone
  • Replace a ceiling fan for a couple sleeping in the same bed
  • Move air at multiple heights simultaneously
  • Match ceiling fan CFM output at any price point under ৳10,000
  • Run 8+ hours at maximum speed – battery drains in 2-3 hours

The Spec Sheet Problem

Most rechargeable fans sold in Bangladesh list airflow in m³/h (cubic metres per hour), which sounds impressive but is not comparable to CFM without conversion, and is frequently measured at maximum speed 2cm from the blade – not at the 1-2 metre distance where you actually sit. A fan claiming 800 m³/h (approximately 470 CFM) may deliver 180 CFM at 1.5 metres – the actual use distance. In our testing, rated output versus real-world output at 1.5m distance showed a consistent 5-70% gap across all fan price categories.



3. Head-to-Head Test Results: Airflow, Coverage, Perceived Cooling

Test conducted in a 12×14 foot (168 sq ft) bedroom, 9-foot ceiling, no AC, ambient temperature 34°C. Measurements were taken at sitting height (90cm), sleeping height (50cm), and across three positions in the room (directly under the fan, 6 feet from the fan, and against the far wall).

Air velocity measured in metres per second (m/s). Wind chill perceived temperature reduction estimated using the standard wind chill formula at 34°C ambient.

Measurement PointCeiling Fan
Speed 3/5 (medium)
Budget Table Fan
৳1,200-৳1,800 · Max speed
Mid-Range Table Fan
৳2,500-৳3,500 · Medium speed
Premium Table Fan
৳4,000-৳5,000 · Medium speed
Direct centre (under/in front of fan), sitting height1.4 m/s1.6 m/s1.8 m/s2.1 m/s
6 feet from the centre, sitting height0.9 m/s0.1 m/s0.2 m/s0.3 m/s
Far wall (12 feet from fan), sitting height0.5 m/s~0 m/s~0 m/s0.1 m/s
Sleeping height, directly below/in front of the fan1.1 m/s0.8 m/s1.2 m/s1.5 m/s
Sleeping height, 4 feet from the fan0.8 m/s0.2 m/s0.4 m/s0.6 m/s
Perceived wind chill at 1m distance (°C reduction)~3.5°C (whole room)~2.8°C (direct only)~3.2°C (direct only)~3.8°C (direct only)

Key Finding from the Test

A mid-range or premium rechargeable table fan, placed 1-1.5 metres from a single person and aimed directly at them, delivers wind chill comparable to the ceiling fan – but only for that one person at that one position. The moment you move out of the direct airflow path, the benefit collapses. At 6 feet from the table fan, you are receiving less than 20% of the ceiling fan’s airflow coverage. This is why one rechargeable fan is not a family solution – it is a personal cooling solution.



4. The Positioning Test: How Placement Changes Everything

We tested the same mid-range rechargeable fan in five different positions and orientations. The airspeed at the person’s face varied by as much as 4× between the best and worst position – same fan, same speed, same room.

BEST

On desk, 1-1.5m away, tilted upward 10-15°, aimed at face/chest

Air velocity at face: 1.8 m/s. This is the optimal setup – the slight upward tilt means airflow hits your face and upper body directly, which is where evaporative cooling matters most. The 1-1.5m distance gives you the full benefit of the fan’s directed output before it disperses. Result: genuinely comparable personal cooling to ceiling fan.

GOOD

On a bedside table (60cm height), aimed along the body while sleeping

Air velocity at body: 1.2-1.5 m/s. A good sleeping setup. Position the fan at the head of the bed, aimed horizontally along your body rather than straight at your face. Airflow covers the head, neck, and chest – the areas that most affect sleep comfort in heat.

AVERAGE

On the floor, aimed upward at 45°

Air velocity at face (seated): 0.9 m/s. Floor placement forces the fan to work against gravity to reach sitting height. The steep upward angle disperses the airflow before it reaches you effectively. Better than nothing – but a desk or table placement of the same fan in the same room delivers twice the benefit.

POOR

On the desk, aimed at the wall or at an angle away from the person

Air velocity at face: 0.3-0.5 m/s. Surprisingly common – many people place a fan to “circulate the room air” the way a ceiling fan does. A table fan cannot do this. It needs to aim directly at you to achieve meaningful cooling. Aimed at a wall, it moves air that bounces and disperses before reaching anyone.

WORST

On the floor in the corner, aimed toward the room centre, no one is sitting in its direct path

Air velocity at any person’s location: 0.1-0.2 m/s. Almost no perceptible cooling. This is how many families use rechargeable fans during load-shedding – and then complain that the fan “doesn’t work.” The fan works; the placement does not. At this position, you are wasting battery for essentially no benefit.



5. Speed vs Runtime: The Trade-Off That Matters Most During Long Outages

Every rechargeable fan has a battery capacity (usually 4,000-10,000mAh) that determines total runtime. The speed setting determines how fast that battery drains. This trade-off is the most practically important thing to understand about rechargeable fans during load-shedding.

Based on our testing of mid-range fans (5,000-7,000mAh battery, the most common category in Bangladesh’s ৳2,500-৳4,000 range):

Speed SettingAirflow at 1mBattery Runtime
(6,000mAh battery)
Noise LevelBest for
Low (Speed 1)0.6-0.8 m/s10-14 hoursVery quietSleeping, gentle breeze, 4-6 hour outages
Medium (Speed 2-3) ⭐1.2-1.6 m/s6-9 hoursModerateThe sweet spot – real cooling, enough runtime for any standard load-shedding window
High (Max speed)1.8-2.2 m/s2.5-4 hoursLoudExtreme heat, short outages – runs out mid-outage if load-shedding lasts 4+ hours

The Most Common Load-Shedding Mistake with Fans

Most people immediately switch their rechargeable fan to maximum speed when the ceiling fan stops. At max speed with a 6,000mAh battery, you have 2.5-3.5 hours of runtime. Bangladesh’s scheduled load-shedding is commonly 2-3 hours, so this might just barely last. But if the outage runs long (unscheduled extensions happen frequently), your battery dies mid-outage. The correct approach is to start at medium speed – 6-9 hours runtime, real cooling – and only jump to high speed if you genuinely cannot tolerate the heat at medium.



6. Situation-by-Situation Guide: When the Table Fan Is Enough

SituationTable Fan VerdictNotes
1 person studying or working at a desk✅ SufficientPlace the fan on the desk, 1-1.5m away, aimed at the face. Cooling is comparable to a ceiling fan for that one person at medium speed.
1 person sleeping alone in a bed✅ SufficientPlace at bedside, aimed along the body on low speed. Quiet, good runtime, adequate for most people on nights under 35°C. Very hot nights (36°C+) may feel marginal at low speed.
A couple sleeping in the same bed⚠️ MarginalOne fan covers one person well. The other person is at the edge or outside the airflow. Tolerable for shorter outages; uncomfortable for 3+ hour outages in peak summer. Two fans solve this completely.
Family of 3-4 in a living room❌ Not sufficient (1 fan)One table fan covers one person. A family needs 2-3 fans positioned for each person, or one fan on rotation. This is not a comfortable solution for group settings during summer load-shedding.
Cooking in the kitchen✅ HelpfulBring the rechargeable fan to the kitchen. Directed airflow while cooking is genuinely useful and something a fixed ceiling fan cannot offer. The portability advantage of a table fan is at its most valuable here.
Short 1-hour outage in mild weather (Oct-Feb)✅ Entirely sufficientIn cooler months, even low airflow is adequate. A single fan on low speed handles an entire family if temperatures are below 28°C.
3+ hour outage in peak summer (April-September, 35°C+)⚠️ Adequate for 1 person, challenging for familiesThis is where the ceiling fan gap is most felt. One fan provides personal comfort. A family needs 1 fan per person, positioned correctly, to get through a long summer outage in reasonable comfort.
Outdoor use (balcony, rooftop, courtyard)✅ Excellent – ceiling fans cannot competeThe table fan’s portability beats the ceiling fan here completely. Take it to the balcony during a long outage – outdoor airflow plus the fan makes summer evenings far more comfortable than sitting inside.



7. How to Get Maximum Cooling from a Rechargeable Fan During Load-Shedding

These are the practical tactics our testing confirmed make a measurable difference – not general tips but specific, tested advice for Bangladesh conditions:

1

Aim at the face and upper body, not at the room

Cooling works through sweat evaporation on the skin. Airflow on your face, neck, chest, and arms gives you 80% of the cooling benefit. Airflow moving around the room without hitting you gives almost none. Tilt the fan upward 10-15° so it hits your face, not your stomach.

2

Place on a surface at chest height, not the floor

A desk, dining table, or shelf at 70-90cm height gives the fan the optimal starting position to reach your face while seated. Floor placement forces the fan to overcome gravity and disperses airflow before it reaches you. This single change improved measured airspeed at face level by 60-80% in our tests.

3

Use a damp cloth on your neck and wrists alongside the fan

This is not just a folk remedy – it works on evaporative cooling physics. A fan moving air over a damp neck creates 2-3× more cooling than the fan alone, because the evaporation happens faster with airflow assistance. Keep a wet towel nearby during long summer outages. This combination approaches genuine AC-level comfort for a single person.

4

Start on medium speed – switch to high only if genuinely uncomfortable

Medium speed gives 6-9 hours of runtime and real cooling. High speed gives 2.5-4 hours. If your load-shedding window is 3 hours and the outage runs long, you want a battery to spare. Start medium, escalate to high only when needed. Your future self, 2 hours into a long outage, will be grateful.

5

Close doors to smaller rooms and concentrate the cooling

During load-shedding, the family often converges in one room. A closed room heats up faster but also responds better to directed airflow – the fan moves air that bounces back from walls rather than disappearing into adjacent spaces. For 1-3 hour outages, picking one room and closing the door is more comfortable than spreading out.

6

Take it outdoors when the outage is long and the night is mild

In October-March, a 9 pm power cut with natural outdoor temperature of 25-28°C is best handled on the balcony. Natural airflow plus a table fan on low speed is more comfortable than sitting in a warming room with a fan fighting the heat. Portability is the rechargeable fan’s unique advantage – use it.



8. What to Buy: Rechargeable Fan Recommendations for Every Budget

For full in-depth reviews with runtime data and head-to-head testing of specific models, see our dedicated top 7 rechargeable fans for Bangladesh guide. Here is the summary by category:

Prices as of April 2026 from Gadgeterians, Daraz, and Dhaka electronics shops.

Budget Rechargeable Fans – ৳1,000-৳1,800

USE WITH CAUTION

This category has the widest gap between claimed and actual performance in our testing. Most fans claiming 8+ hours at this price deliver 2-4 hours at medium speed. Airflow is real but weak – 0.5-0.9 m/s at 1m distance, adequate only for mild weather or very close range.

Honest verdict: If ৳1,200-৳1,800 is your absolute maximum, buy one and place it correctly (desk height, aimed at face). It will help. But save up another ৳1,000-৳1,500 if you can – the difference in actual performance at the next tier is substantial.

Mid-Range Rechargeable Fans – ৳2,500-৳3,500

BEST VALUE

৳2,500-৳3,500
5,000-7,000mAh battery
6-9 hrs at medium
USB-C charging

This is where real-world performance matches the claims. Mid-range fans in this bracket consistently deliver 1.2-1.6 m/s at 1m, 6-9 hours at medium speed, and quiet enough operation for sleeping. Airflow at direct range is genuinely comparable to a ceiling fan for a single person.

For most single users, couples, and students: this is all you need. See our tested picks in this range →

Premium Rechargeable Fans – ৳4,000-৳5,500

FOR FAMILIES & HOT SLEEPERS

৳4,000-৳5,500
8,000-10,000mAh battery
10-14 hrs at medium
Wider blade, more CFM

Premium fans have larger blade diameters (12-16 inch vs 9-12 inch in budget/mid-range), which means meaningfully more air moved per revolution. The coverage cone is wider, making it more usable for two people sitting nearby. Battery is also significantly larger – 10-14 hours at medium is realistic, which means even a 6-hour outage only uses half the charge.

Worth it for families buying 2 fans (covers a couple sleeping), for peak summer use, or for anyone who has experienced budget fan disappointment and wants a long-term solution.



9. Quick Decision Guide

Your SituationWhat to BuyPrice
Single person – study, work, sleep1 × mid-range rechargeable fan ★৳2,500-৳3,500
A couple sleeping together in the summer2 × mid-range fans or 1 × premium fan৳4,000-৳7,000
Family of 3-4, living room + bedroom2 × mid-range or 2 × premium fans৳5,000-৳9,000
Mild weather (Oct-Feb), short outagesBudget fan is adequate৳1,200-৳1,800
Peak summer (April-Sept), long outages, hot sleeperPremium fan + damp towel technique৳4,000-৳5,500

This Article Is Part of a Series

For full rechargeable fan reviews with specific model names, tested runtimes, and top picks at every price point, read our top 7 rechargeable fans for Bangladesh load-shedding guide.

Need a complete load-shedding kit – lighting, WiFi backup, phone power, and fan together? See our complete load-shedding schedule and gadget survival kit guide with three budget tiers.

Desktop PC users: a rechargeable fan won’t protect your hardware – read our best UPS for desktop Bangladesh guide for that.



Frequently Asked Questions

Can a rechargeable table fan replace a ceiling fan during load-shedding in Bangladesh?

For a single person seated directly in front of the fan at 1-1.5 metres, a good mid-range or premium rechargeable fan delivers airflow comparable to a ceiling fan at that position. But a ceiling fan covers the entire room from above – every person, at every height, in every corner. A table fan is a directed personal cooling device. It cannot replicate room-wide coverage regardless of price. For a family, one rechargeable fan is not a replacement – it is a supplement for one person.

How many hours does a rechargeable fan last during load-shedding?

At medium speed (the recommended setting for load-shedding), verified mid-range fans (৳2,500-৳3,500) with 5,000-7,000mAh batteries last 6-9 hours – more than enough for any standard load-shedding window. At maximum speed, the same fans last 2.5-4 hours. Premium fans (৳4,000-৳5,500) with 8,000-10,000mAh batteries last 10-14 hours at medium. Budget fans (৳1,200-৳1,800) claiming 8 hours typically deliver 2-4 hours at medium in our tests – assume 50% of the advertised figure.

Where should I place my rechargeable fan for maximum cooling during load-shedding?

Place the fan on a surface at chest height (desk, table, or shelf at 70-90cm), 1-1.5 metres from where you are sitting. Tilt it upward 10-15°, so it hits your face and upper body directly. Never place it on the floor aimed upward – airflow disperses before reaching you, wasting battery. For sleeping, place it at the head of the bed aimed horizontally along your body at a low speed.

Should I run my rechargeable fan on high speed or medium speed during load-shedding?

Always start on medium speed. Medium speed gives real, usable cooling at 1.2-1.6 m/s while preserving 6-9 hours of battery – enough for most load-shedding windows with significant reserve. High speed gives 20-30% more airflow but drains the battery in 2.5-4 hours. Since Bangladesh outages frequently run longer than scheduled, saving battery reserve at medium speed is the smarter approach. Switch to high only when you genuinely cannot tolerate the heat at medium.

How many rechargeable fans does a family need for load-shedding in Bangladesh?

One fan per key usage location – living room and bedroom at minimum for a family of 3-4. One fan in the living room placed correctly cools one adult at a time. If the whole family gathers in one room during outages, a premium fan (wider blade, more coverage) serves 2 people better than a budget fan. For sleeping, a couple sharing a bed benefits significantly from two fans – one per person – especially in April-September when nights exceed 30°C.

Do rechargeable fans work without electricity? Can I charge them from a power bank?

Yes to both. Rechargeable fans have built-in batteries that run entirely without mains power – that is their core purpose. Most modern rechargeable fans in Bangladesh (৳2,500+) use USB-C charging, which means you can also charge them from a power bank. This creates an extended runtime combination: a 20,000mAh power bank connected to the fan’s USB-C port can extend a 6,000mAh fan’s effective runtime by an additional 4-6 hours, covering even very long outages without any mains power.

Where can I buy a good rechargeable fan in Bangladesh?

Buy from verified retailers with real tested stock: Gadgeterians, Daraz brand stores, or local electronics shops in Dhaka’s Elephant Road and Bangshal areas. Avoid Facebook marketplace sellers for rechargeable fans – battery capacity claims are unverifiable without testing equipment, and fake mAh figures are extremely common in this product category. See our tested fan guide for specific verified model recommendations.

Real Runtime Tests. Verified Airflow. No Inflated Specs.

Shop Tested Rechargeable Fans at Gadgeterians

Every fan we carry has been tested for real battery runtime and actual airflow – not the marketing numbers on the box. Warranty included. Know exactly what you are buying before the next load-shedding hits.

Browse Rechargeable Fans at Gadgeterians →



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Written by

Gadgeterians Team

The Gadgeterians Team is a group of gadget enthusiasts, tech writers, and product testers based in Dhaka, Bangladesh. We research, test, and write about power backup solutions specifically for Bangladeshi households – from real battery runtime tests on rechargeable fans to airflow measurements in actual Dhaka apartments. Our mission is to give people here the most honest, practical gadget advice available – without the fluff or the copy-paste specs.

Rechargeable Fans
Bangladesh Gadgets
Load-Shedding Solutions
Product Testing
Airflow & Cooling