The Hunter Aerodyne is the airflow-focused modern smart fan, built around Hunter's SureSpeed design that the company says produces over 33% more air velocity than leading competitors. It carries HunterSMART Wi-Fi with Alexa, Google, and Apple HomeKit support, and reviewers and the Quietest tested roundup praised its strong airflow and easy installation. The recurring complaint, echoed across owner reviews and a YouTube test, is inconsistent noise — some units run quiet, others develop a motor hum. For powerful, smart airflow at a mainstream price it's a strong pick, with quality-control variance the main risk.

Full review
Built for Airflow
Where the Haiku L chases silence and the Light Wave chases looks, the Aerodyne chases air velocity. Hunter's SureSpeed design is engineered to move more air, and the company claims it 'produce[s] over 33% more air velocity than leading competitors while maintaining whisper-quiet and wobble-free performance.' The Quietest tested roundup backed the airflow claim, calling the Aerodyne 'a jack-of-all-trades that looks good in almost any room, has a quiet DC motor, and offers great airflow.' For a large living room or a hot space that needs real circulation, that velocity focus is the draw.
The five-blade design and DC motor deliver that output across six speeds, with the fan running quietly on low and moving serious air on high — the range you want in a primary-room fan.
Broad Smart-Home Support
The Aerodyne is part of Hunter's HunterSMART line, with built-in Wi-Fi and compatibility across Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, and Apple HomeKit — the widest ecosystem support of any fan in this group. The Wi-Fi and remote receiver are built into the canopy, which reviewers noted makes installation fast since there's no separate module to wire. Voice control and app scheduling work as expected for the basics.
The caveat is that the smart layer is the Aerodyne's least polished aspect. Owners report the Hunter app can be finicky, and HomeKit integration is limited — in some cases controlling on/off but not fan speed. It works, but it's not as seamless as the Haiku L's tightly integrated experience.
Design and Build
The Aerodyne's look is modern but understated — clean five-blade styling in matte black, dove grey, or fresh white that fits most rooms without making a statement. It's less distinctive than the sculptural Light Wave, but that neutrality is part of its broad appeal. Build quality is typical Hunter: solid, wobble-free mounting and a reassuring heft. Installation is among the easiest here thanks to the integrated receiver.
What Reviewers Loved
Quietest rated it well for versatility, quiet DC motor, and great airflow with no specific cons in their summary, recommending it for any room. Owners and the YouTube reviewer praised the easy, fast installation and the strong air movement. The combination of high airflow, broad smart support, and a mainstream price is what wins the Aerodyne its recommendation.
Where It Falls Short
The Aerodyne's Achilles' heel is noise consistency. While many owners find it quiet, a notable subset report a motor hum, with some describing a sound that cycles about once per second, and at least one noting a replacement unit was no better. That variance is a real risk on a fan otherwise marketed as whisper-quiet. The finicky app and limited HomeKit speed control are the other recurring frustrations, and the price sits above Hunter's simpler non-smart fans.
Who It's Best For
The Hunter Aerodyne is the right pick for a large or hot room where airflow matters most, especially for buyers who want HomeKit support alongside Alexa and Google. It installs easily and moves a lot of air for the money. Consider the Big Ass Fans Haiku L instead if guaranteed quietness is non-negotiable, or the Dreo Smart Ceiling Fan if you want smart features at a lower price and can accept less airflow.
Value at This Price
At around $350 the Aerodyne lands between the budget Dreo and the premium Haiku L, and what you're paying for is airflow plus the broadest smart-home support in this roundup, including Apple HomeKit. That HomeKit support is genuinely hard to find on ceiling fans and is the Aerodyne's clearest differentiator against the Dreo and the Minka-Aire fans. The value calculus hinges on the noise lottery, though: if you draw a quiet unit, the Aerodyne is a strong deal for the airflow and ecosystem breadth; if you draw a hummer, you'll wish you'd spent up for the Haiku L. Hunter's brand reliability and easy installation tilt the odds in its favor, but it's worth buying from a retailer with a friendly return policy in case your particular fan is one of the louder ones.
Strengths
- +SureSpeed design produces over 33% more air velocity than leading competitors
- +HunterSMART Wi-Fi with Alexa, Google, and Apple HomeKit support
- +Quiet DC motor on lower speeds with strong high-speed output
- +Modern, understated design in matte black, dove grey, and white
- +Wi-Fi and remote receiver built in for fast installation
Watch-outs
- −Noise is inconsistent unit to unit — some owners report a motor hum
- −Hunter app can be finicky and HomeKit control is limited
- −Premium price relative to Hunter's non-smart fans
- −Five-blade design less distinctive than sculptural rivals
How it compares
The Hunter Aerodyne prioritizes raw air velocity, claiming more airflow than competitors, while staying cheaper than the Big Ass Fans Haiku L. It matches the Minka-Aire Light Wave and Minka-Aire Concept IV on DC-motor efficiency and adds broader smart-home support than either, including HomeKit. Its noise consistency is less reliable than the Haiku L, and its five-blade design is less distinctive than the Light Wave.
Who this is for
At a glance: Buyers who want maximum airflow plus broad smart-home support at a mainstream price.
Why you’d buy the Hunter Aerodyne
- SureSpeed design produces over 33% more air velocity than leading competitors.
- HunterSMART Wi-Fi with Alexa, Google, and Apple HomeKit support.
- Quiet DC motor on lower speeds with strong high-speed output.
Why you’d skip it
- Noise is inconsistent unit to unit — some owners report a motor hum.
- Hunter app can be finicky and HomeKit control is limited.
- Premium price relative to Hunter's non-smart fans.
Rating sources
“a jack-of-all-trades that looks good in almost any room, has a quiet DC motor, and offers great airflow”
“SureSpeed ceiling fans produce over 33% more air velocity than leading competitors while maintaining whisper-quiet and wobble-free performance”
“Review Hunter Fan Company 51314 Aerodyne Ceiling Fan, 52, Matte Black”
Our 4.1 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



