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southace said..
I would have thought those computer fans only cool computers and fringes. Not sure they would circulate much air in a yacht. Would be interesting to do the tests.
The nice varnished hatch photos are not mine, but copied from somewhere online years ago. I have made the same set-up in the previous yacht, and in my steel garden shed, and I hear and feel them exhausting hot air each time I pass by. Reliable. After Lockdown, I will need to install one in my yacht.
By way of comparison, the cheaper white marine solar vent,
www.whitworths.com.au/plastic-solar-exhaust-vent here extracts 680 cubic feet per hour, or 11.3 cu.ft. per minute. Computer fans are built to run for years, and some models are much quieter than others, and there are variations in voltage and diameter from 40mm, 50mm, 80mm, 90mm and 120mm. Most of them fall into the price bracket of $18 to $25.
A quiet 90mm fan here:
www.jaycar.com.au/90mm-silent-hydrodynamic-bearing-case-fan/p/YX2572 (90mm, 12 volts, silent operation, $25, about 2 Watts per fan) here claims three times the air extraction, i.e. 31.3 cub.ft/min or 0.89 cubic metres/minute. You could always use 2 of these, with any ducting to push/pull air into the forecabin and in the stern of the boat too.
This fan:
www.jaycar.com.au/90mm-12v-dc-2-wire-fan/p/YX2521 does 1.67 cubic metres a minute for almost 4 Watts, $20.
By not having a marine solar vent, but a cheaper computer fan, it costs far less. Instead of a tiny solar panel on top of the fan, this method pinches some power from the main solar panels, but when we are not on the yacht, it would only go to waste.