hev·shop
Hampton Bay Arctic Sky 54 in. Indoor Brushed Nickel Ceiling Fan with Light Kit and Wall Control Remote
Tools and Home Improvement

Hampton Bay Arctic Sky 54 in. Indoor Brushed Nickel Ceiling Fan with Light Kit and Wall Control Remote

★★★★★5.0·2 ratings

Add a unique contemporary look to your home with the Hampton Bay Arctic Sky 54 in. Brushed Nickel Ceiling Fan. This 3-speed fan features 5 blades to help move air efficiently, with quiet, wobble-free operation. The light kit offers opal white glass in a dome-style while the wall control provides independent light and speed controls. Uses two 50-Watt mini-candelabra halogen bulbs (included). If you’re tired of using the Wall Control Remote and you want to include your traditional ceiling fan in your automated home system, the Bond is the simplest and quickest way to do so. Bond Smart Wifi Fan Remote Hub, it enables you to control your fan, along with the lighting that goes with it. Bond is compatible with Amazon Echo and Google Home when used. Bond works with Alexa and other compatible smart home products. (Bond sold separately). 5 silver blades with 14° blade pitch for greater air movement Integrated 2-light kit with opal white glass Wall mount touch control with 3-speed and manual reverse function (for movement of warm air in colder months) Brushed nickel finish and sleek design complements a variety of contemporary decor styles For interior use only Large rooms: room size from 12 ft. x 12 ft. to 18 ft. x 18 ft. Includes 3.5 in. and 6 in. downrods with 3/4 in. Dia 188 mm x 20 mm motor offers superior air movement Airflow 5297, electricity use 74-Watt, airflow efficiency 71.56 Controls your fan via a bond smartphone app Light and speed control Bond smart remote makes your ceiling fan smart with no rewiring WWB: Works with bond seamless one-click integration Bond sold separately

ASIN
B009M99Q0A
Embedding
CLIP ViT-L/14 · 768d
Distance metric
cosine
Doc fetch
2mscache hitGET /v2/namespaces/amazon-products/documents/B009M99Q0A
Similar query
21msnearest_to_id → /query

Doc fetch goes through Layer's Aerospike pull-through cache; cache hit served the row without touching turbopuffer. The similar query asks Layer for nearest neighbors of the stored product vector — queries don't go through the doc cache, so no cache header is set.

Visually similar

You might also like