2025 test17 productsOutdoor Power Equipment

Which Jet Fan Blower Brand Wins?

We compared 17 jet fan blower options head to head. Oley came out on top. See the measured results, the runner-up, the budget pick, and a link to the full test video.

The verdict
Winner

Oley

Price shown in test: $230 (tool, battery, and charger)

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Runner-up

Storm Industries

Price shown in test: $130 (tool only, not battery/charger)

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Budget pick

Purcoco

Price shown in test: $75 (tool, two batteries, and charger)

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The measured results

Every number below is read straight from the test. Scroll sideways to see all measurements. Products are listed in the order they finished.

ProductSpecsWeightNoiseRpm MeasuredAir Speed No NozzleWind ForceCfmWater Removal TestWood Chips TestAir Speed With Nozzle
1Oley$230 (tool, battery, and charger)claims 1,400 g of air pressure, 4 different air speeds, 2 nozzles, includes a 21V 4 Ah battery, charger, and LED light; claims to produce "hurricane speed winds"; made in China (transcript consistently mangles this brand as "Olay"; resolved to Oley per the description's product list)2.29 lb106 dB, very loudover 39,000 RPM, more than most other brands57.1 m/s / 127.8 mph, third-best air speed of all 17 brands (behind LIVOWALNY, which exceeded the meter's max, and Storm Industries at 146.7 mph)over 1,200 g (about 2.5 lb), first place, by a wide margin over the next closest (Storm Industries at 890 g)336 CFM, first place (Storm Industries second at 306, Zuyiyi third at 304)4.4 seconds, first place, fastest of all 17 brands2.2 seconds, first place, fastest of all 17 brandsnot tested
2Storm Industries$130 (tool only, not battery/charger)brushless motor, uses a Milwaukee battery, designed in the United States with no manufacturing location disclosed; the narrator notes a long wait for delivery (ordered late April, arrived May 24th)2.32 lb with a 5 Ah Milwaukee battery113.3 dB, extremely loud, second loudest of all 17 brands behind the Zuyiyi's 118 dBover 53,000 RPM65.6 m/s / 146.7 mph, second place behind the LIVOWALNY, which exceeded the air speed meter's testing capability890 g, second place behind the Oley306 CFM, second place behind the Oley5.5 seconds, third place in the final recap (behind Oley and Zuyiyi), though it briefly held second place earlier in the sequence before Oley's number was revealed3.2 seconds, second place behind the Oleynot tested
3Zuyiyi$40 (tool only, not battery/charger)claims up to 1,200 g of thrust and 55,000 RPM; uses a Makita battery; made in China (transcript spells this brand "Zu Yiyi" and later "Zee Yee"; resolved to Zuyiyi per the description's product list)2.8 lb118 dB, the loudest of all 17 brands testedaround 29,600 RPM50.6 m/s / 113.2 mph790 g (1.74 lb), led the wind-force ranking at that point in the video's sequence before higher-scoring brands were testednot tested5.1 seconds, second place behind the Oley4.5 seconds, very fast, among the best times, though not explicitly ranked in the final wood-chips recap (only the top three, Oley/Storm Industries/Purcoco, are explicitly ranked there)not tested
4Purcoco$75 (tool, two batteries, and charger)brushless motor, claims a max current of 24 amps; made in China (transcript spells this brand "Pure Coco" and later "PIERCOCO"; resolved to Purcoco per the description's product list)2.32 lb110 dB, one of the loudest of all 17 brandsalmost 34,700 RPM, notably higher than most other brands in this price range48.9 m/s, over 109 mph, one of the best of all 17 brands842 g, third place behind Oley and Storm Industries; briefly held the lead earlier in the sequence before those two brands were testednot tested5.8 seconds, briefly second place before Storm Industries' and Oley's later numbers superseded it4.4 seconds, third place in the final recap behind Oley and Storm Industriesnot tested
5URUN$40 (tool only, not battery/charger)claims 130,000 RPM, a brushless motor, and suitability for car drying; works with a DeWalt battery; includes two attachments; made in China916 g, just over 2 lb90.3 dB, second-quietest of all 17 brands behind the Ohyesalmost 89,000 RPM, the highest measured RPM of all 17 brands, despite falling well short of its own 130,000 RPM claimaround 27 m/s, just over 60 mph206 g, one of the lowest of all 17 brands, despite having the highest measured RPM; used by the narrator as the clearest example that higher RPM does not always mean better real-world performancenot tested17.3 seconds29.5 seconds, the slowest of all 17 brandsover 60 m/s, 134.9 mph
6Tegatok$42 (tool, battery, and charger)20V 4 Ah battery, claims to be lightweight at 2.6 lb and to deliver 20 minutes of working time on a full charge; integrated LED light; made in China (transcript spells this brand "Tagatalk" and "TAKAGI TALK"; resolved to Tegatok per the description's product list)2.58 lb109.2 dB, pretty loudjust under 22,500 peak RPM85.1 mph, about 30 mph slower than the Zuyiyi438 g (about 1 lb), unable to keep up with the Zuyiyinot tested8.9 seconds, 3.9 seconds slower than the Zuyiyi11.9 seconds, about three times longer than the Zuyiyinot tested
7Ohyes$43 (tool only, not battery/charger)claims up to 440 mph of air speed, 100,000 RPM, and an inner-rotor brushless motor; uses a Milwaukee battery; made in China (transcript refers to this brand as "OYS"; resolved to Ohyes per the description's product list)2.325 lb with the Milwaukee battery89.4 dB, the quietest of all 17 brands tested76,385 RPM (also stated more roughly as "just over 76,000"), short of its 100,000 RPM claimaround 51 m/s, 114 mph262 g, gave up early, a weak resultnot tested12.7 secondsclose to 12 seconds83 m/s, 185.7 mph
8Vopot$50claims 300,000 RPM, is called "a violent fan" in its own owner's manual per the narrator, a claimed max air speed of 112 mph, 300 CFM claim; comes with two batteries and a charger; made in China (transcript spells this brand "Volpat" and later "VPOD"; resolved to Vopot per the description's product list)1.72 lb, stated later in the recap as 1.73 lb, the lightest of all 17 brands either way98.3 dBaround 20,600 RPM, well short of the 300,000 RPM claim36.5 m/s peak, 81.6 mph418 g, described as about the same as the Tegatok; this exact figure (418 g) is also given for both the Cardmap and the YUQUESEN in three consecutive sentences, an unusual repetition across three different products that is likely a transcript/caption duplication rather than three genuinely identical measurements; kept literal and flaggednot tested8.8 seconds, about the same as the Tegatok9.7 secondsnot tested
9Cardmap$57 (kit)claims a maximum air speed of 112 mph; kit comes with two 2.6 Ah batteries; made in China (transcript spells this brand "Card Mat"/"CARDMAT"; resolved to Cardmap per the description's product list)2.41 lb103.1 dB, pretty loudjust over 21,800 RPM, almost as fast as the Vopotaround 37 m/s, close to 83 mph418 g; see the Vopot entry's note on this figure appearing identically across three different brands in a row, likely a caption duplicationnot tested7.9 seconds, about a second faster than the Vopotgiven twice in the transcript with two close but different figures: 7.3 seconds ("moves into second place behind the ZEE YEE at 7.3 seconds") and, in a separate sentence shortly after, 7.4 seconds ("continues to perform better than average on this test at 7.4 seconds"); kept both rather than picking one, likely a near-duplicate caption artifact rather than two genuinely different runsnot tested
10YUQUESEN$60claims a high-speed turbine motor delivering 300,000 RPM and a max air speed well over 100 mph; includes two 4 Ah batteries and a charger; made in China (transcript spells this brand "Ucquizen"/"YUKUIZAN"; resolved to YUQUESEN per the description's product list)2.35 lb105.2 dB, pretty loudjust over 21,700 RPM, almost as fast as the Cardmap34.3 m/s peak, 76.6 mph418 g, described as no match for the Cardmap or the Zuyiyi; see the Vopot entry's note on this repeated figurenot tested9.5 seconds11 seconds, trailed the Cardmapnot tested
11Denaztl$60claims the turbojet blower produces 320,000 RPM; comes with a 21V 4 Ah battery and charger; made in China (transcript spells this brand "Denazel"/"DENATSU"; resolved to Denaztl per the description's product list)2.29 lb98.2 dBaround 23,300 RPM, about 1,500 more than the YUQUESEN37.1 m/s, 83.1 mph, about the same as the Cardmap350 g, below averagenot tested9.9 seconds, a little slower than the YUQUESEN11.2 seconds, a little behind the YUQUESENnot tested
12LIVOWALNY$60 (tool only, not battery/charger)claims a very impressive 447 mph air speed; comes with five different blower nozzles; claims 39 CFM; uses a DeWalt battery; made in China (transcript spells this brand "Livawani"/"LIVONIA"; resolved to LIVOWALNY per the description's product list)2.83 lb with the DeWalt battery94.3 dBjust under 84,200 RPM, second-highest of all 17 brands behind the URUNexceeded the air speed meter's maximum testing capability of over 190 mph, both with and without the nozzle; the single fastest measured result of all 17 brands, well beyond its own already-aggressive 447 mph claim in the sense that the meter simply could not measure high enough to confirm or deny itonly 200 g, one of the lowest of all 17 brands despite the extreme air speed, illustrating the same speed-versus-force disconnect as the URUNnot testedjust under 13 seconds, hurt by producing only around 52 CFM despite its extreme air speed17.2 seconds, struggled badlynot tested
13Saker$70 (cordless blower, battery, and charger)claims 260 CFM, 180,000 RPM, and 600 g of air pressure; comes with two 21V 3,000 mAh batteries; made in China2.44 lb104.1 dBjust under 22,900 RPM, a little faster than average37.4 m/s, 83.7 mph, more than average524 g, briefly a distant second place behind the Zuyiyi before higher scores were testednot tested7 seconds, briefly second place behind the Zuyiyi before higher-performing brands were tested later9.1 seconds, better than averagenot tested
14KOPIDOE$70claims the electric motor produces 360,000 RPM at 200 mph of air speed, and 650 g of air pressure; kit includes two 21V batteries and a charger; made in China (transcript spells this brand "Copado"/"KOBADO"; resolved to KOPIDOE per the description's product list)1.83 lb, pretty light108.8 dB, really loudvery close to 23,000 RPM41.4 m/s, 92.7 mph, a little more than the Saker440 g, ran out of steam sooner than the Sakernot tested9.7 seconds8.9 seconds, a small edge over the Saker due to producing more air volumenot tested
15Windpost$74claims the turbojet motor delivers 35,000 RPM (a comparatively modest claim versus most other brands' six-figure RPM claims); includes a charger, one 24V 4 Ah battery, and two air nozzles; made in China2.6 lb99.7 dBjust over 23,200 RPM, faster than most other brands, and notably one of the few brands whose measured RPM comes reasonably close to its own claimed figure40.9 m/s, 91.4 mph, better than average514 g, quite a bit better than averagenot tested9.3 secondsno figure for this brand appears anywhere in the wood-chips test section of the transcript, unlike every other brand; a genuine gap rather than an explicit skipnot tested
16Ryobi ONE+ HP$135 (tool only, not battery/charger)claims 220 CFM and 140 mph air speed; kit includes two extension tubes, a speed tip, and a flat nozzle; soft tip claimed to reduce accidental-contact damage; claims to be "the industry's most powerful compact blower"; made in Vietnam3.44 lb, stated later in the recap as 3.45 lb, the heaviest of all 17 brands either way99.9 dB, makes less noise than mostnot tested; the narrator explicitly states the fan is buried too deep within the housing to measure blade speed46.7 m/s, 104.4 mph, one of the best yet676 g, better than average given its larger sizenot tested7.1 seconds; trailed several other brands for air volume/CFM but performed well for air speed5.1 seconds, quite a bit better than average53.8 m/s, 120 mph
17Storm Machine$140claims 400,000 RPM, the highest RPM claim of any brand in the video; kit includes two 21V 4 Ah batteries; made in China2.46 lb92.5 dBaround 17,200 RPM, one of the lowest measured RPMs of all 17 brands despite having the single highest RPM claim in the video, a stark claim-versus-reality gap32.2 m/s, 72 mph424 g, came up well short of the leadersnot tested10.2 seconds, struggling to keep up with the Storm Industries and Ryobi14.5 seconds, described as really struggling35.2 m/s, 78.7 mph

How it was tested

  • no-load RPM measured with a calibrated meter (capable up to 200,000 RPM) via a reflective sticker on the blade
  • noise level measured with a sound meter from 24 in away
  • weight of each unit as tested (including battery where applicable)
  • air speed with an air speed meter, with and without an air nozzle where applicable, in m/s and mph
  • wind force/pressure in grams
  • air volume (CFM), tested for a subset of top-performing brands
  • speed removing water from an elevated vehicle hood
  • speed moving close to 3 lb of wood chips
  • overall scorecard converting each brand's results across the graded categories into a first-to-last place ranking, averaged into a single per-brand finish

And the Olay came out on top with the best average finish at 1.4.

From the test video verdict.
Data notes and caveats

17 brands tested (description brand list: Ryobi, Storm Industries, Oley, Zuyiyi, Purcoco, Windpost, Saker, KOPIDOE, Cardmap, Tegatok, Vopot, Denaztl, YUQUESEN, Ohyes, Storm Machine, LIVOWALNY, URUN). Nearly every smaller/cheaper brand is phonetically mangled in the transcript (Olay/Oley, Zu Yiyi or Zee Yee/Zuyiyi, Tagatalk or Takagi Talk/Tegatok, OYS/Ohyes, Volpat or VPOD/Vopot, Card Mat/Cardmap, Ucquizen or Yukuizan/YUQUESEN, Denazel or Denatsu/Denaztl, Livawani or Livonia/LIVOWALNY, Copado or Kobado/KOPIDOE); all resolved against the description's product list and cross-checked against the video's own per-brand chapter markers, which match this resolution closely. A wind-force figure of exactly 418 g is given for three different brands in three consecutive sentences (Vopot, Cardmap, YUQUESEN), an unusual repetition likely caused by a transcript/caption duplication rather than three genuinely identical measurements; kept literal and flagged on each of the three entries. Two explicit budget/value picks are given depending on context: Zuyiyi (Zee Yee) is recommended only for buyers already invested in the Makita battery platform, while Purcoco is recommended as the more universally applicable pick for buyers wanting a complete kit with battery and charger included; budgetPick is set to Purcoco as the broader recommendation, with Zuyiyi's conditional pick noted on its own entry. Windpost has no wood-chips test result anywhere in the transcript, unlike every other brand, with no stated reason (a probable content/caption gap, not an explicit skip). Ryobi's RPM was deliberately not tested per the narrator's own stated reason (the fan is buried too deep in the housing) and its form factor (extension tubes, handheld blower) differs from the compact "jet fan" style of the other 16 brands.

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