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Wiring ceiling fan and light with one switch
Wiring ceiling fan and light with one switch





wiring ceiling fan and light with one switch
  1. WIRING CEILING FAN AND LIGHT WITH ONE SWITCH HOW TO
  2. WIRING CEILING FAN AND LIGHT WITH ONE SWITCH INSTALL
  3. WIRING CEILING FAN AND LIGHT WITH ONE SWITCH CODE

Ground wires are connected together and to the base of devices, switches and metal boxes or fixtures. In a modern, properly wired system, there also should be these, both from each cable and at the fan. You make no mention of green or bare wire (ground). The fan wire colors may vary, but the instructions should indicate which is which. For the purpose of the diagrams we assume that if there is only one wall switch it powers the light and the fan is controlled by a switch on the fixture. In the switch box, all of the whites (neutrals) continue to be connected.Īt the ceiling box, the white goes to white, the black goes to the wire for either fan or light, and the red goes to the other.

WIRING CEILING FAN AND LIGHT WITH ONE SWITCH CODE

The National Electrical Code requires two cubic inches inside the electrical box for each 14 conductor. If using the diagram above, you will need a deep ceiling fan-rated box to handle all of the wires. Effectively, these switches share an "in" but have separate "outs". Ceiling fan wiring diagram depicting one outlet and two switches getting power from the ceiling box. The upper black goes to the other side of the first switch and the upper red goes to the other side of the second switch. The lower hot black goes to the common on a double switch or one pole on each of the two switches.

WIRING CEILING FAN AND LIGHT WITH ONE SWITCH INSTALL

You can install a double switch or two separate switches in the box to separately control the fan and light.

wiring ceiling fan and light with one switch

The whites are all neutrals and all should be connected to each other (and not to the switch). The posts stated 14/2 cable can be used but will not allow separate control of the fan and light.

WIRING CEILING FAN AND LIGHT WITH ONE SWITCH HOW TO

The upper black was probably also connected to the switch asn was hot when the switch is on and not hot (open) when the switch is off. The electrician is unable to work for me this weekend so I Googled how to wire a ceiling fan with separate fan and light switches and found multiple posts stating 14/3 cable is the only proper wire to use unless Smurf tube is used. More than likely, one of the lower black wires is the hot source, and it is connected to the other lower black to power another box, and is also connected to the existing switch. If all three black wires were connected together, what wires go to the switch? Your description of the switch box seems a little off. If so, you should have a red wire in the ceiling box that is unused and probably capped with a wire nut. Connect the two ground wires together with a wire nut.I am assuming that the upper wire is the cable that goes to the ceiling where the fan/light is to be installed. connect the white wires together the same way. Connect the black wire from the box to the black wire from the light fixture with a wire nut. The red main or live wire is what supplies electricity from the source or outlet to the fan by connecting with red secondary or blue wire from ceiling fan. It also allows independent control of the light fixture. Use a stepladder to reach the wires in your ceiling and carefully cut away the plastic coating about 2 inches (5.1 cm) from the end of the wires with a wire cutter. The red wire on a ceiling fan is the wire that connects to the switch, which turns power on and off for your ceiling fan. Remove the plastic caps that are on the ends of your wires. To remove the backstab wires, shove a small screwdriver into the slot by the wires and put the wire out.Īt the ceiling box, remove the red wire and wire nut it. To connect your wires, the copper ends must be exposed. Now mount the switch and get a cover similar to the one shown below. Ground the switch with a piece of #14 wire. Remove the other black wire from the backstab at the other end of the switch and bend a shepherd's hook on the stripped wire and screw it to the other terminal on the new switch. Pigtail them with a small piece of black wire and connect it to the new switch. Remove the black wire loop from the switch screw terminal and the wire from the backstab next to it. Now get a new single pole single throw, standard toggle switch since you stated both switches were cracked. Remove the red wire and put a wire nut on it. Remove the two black wires on the red wire switch, one from the screw terminal and one from the backstab and wire nut them together. Lets eliminate the switch with the red wire.







Wiring ceiling fan and light with one switch