Why “turning on the fan” is only half the story
Effective capture depends on geometry and airflow working together. The hood must overhang the front burners enough to intercept the buoyant plume before it spreads across the room. A narrow hood mounted too high behaves like a ceiling fan near the cooktop: it moves air, but not necessarily through the polluted region you care about.
Manufacturers publish airflow in cubic feet per minute (CFM), yet raw CFM rarely equals what you feel at the pans. Duct friction, transitions, and outdoor termination caps can quietly shed performance. That is why duct design belongs in the same conversation as the hood model—especially in apartments where long, flexible runs are common.
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