DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   circuit up to code? (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/114090-circuit-up-code.html)

gd226 July 20th 05 09:13 PM

circuit up to code?
 

Is this circuit acceptable?

Power to a double switch. 3-wire cable from the switch to a
ceiling fan and a separate light fixture.

The black of the 3-wire is connected to the top switch and supplies the
fan. The red is connected to the bottom switch and at the fan box is
connected to a 2-wire that goes from the fan to the light.


Colbyt July 20th 05 09:58 PM


"gd226" wrote in message
oups.com...

Is this circuit acceptable?

Power to a double switch. 3-wire cable from the switch to a
ceiling fan and a separate light fixture.

The black of the 3-wire is connected to the top switch and supplies the
fan. The red is connected to the bottom switch and at the fan box is
connected to a 2-wire that goes from the fan to the light.


Yes and the ground (bare wire) and neutral (white) are shared by both.


Colbyt



RBM July 20th 05 10:37 PM

Electrically it is fine, however mechanically it would only meet code if the
ceiling box is rated for support of a fan
"gd226" wrote in message
oups.com...

Is this circuit acceptable?

Power to a double switch. 3-wire cable from the switch to a
ceiling fan and a separate light fixture.

The black of the 3-wire is connected to the top switch and supplies the
fan. The red is connected to the bottom switch and at the fan box is
connected to a 2-wire that goes from the fan to the light.




gd226 July 20th 05 10:57 PM


thanks for the replies
the box is rated for fan

is a double 3-way switch made?


PipeDown July 20th 05 11:04 PM

Yes, electrically it is fine but code is more often concerned with the
physical installation than it is with the circuit itself (since wrong wiring
usually results in no light or blown breakers, it is usually obvious)

In addition to the box load rated (up to 40 lbs after that you need to bolt
to a rafter). You need the proper wire gague for the breaker, proper
routing and stapling of the wire between the box and switch (which covers a
lot depending on where the wire goes) etc. And if any wires are aluminum,
there are additional concerns.


"gd226" wrote in message
oups.com...

thanks for the replies
the box is rated for fan

is a double 3-way switch made?




Tim Fischer July 21st 05 04:36 PM

"gd226" wrote in message

is a double 3-way switch made?


Where does the "3-way" come into play? If you're planning two switches for
each device (fan and light) you need a more complicated wiring scheme than
you described.

If you're only having one switch location, you just need a double switch,
not a "double 3-way switch".

-Tim



gd226 July 23rd 05 07:43 PM


thanks for the everyone's input... mission accomplished.

from the original single-pole circuit supplying the fan and light,
I added the light onto a nearby 3-way circuit with the other lights.
then installed another fan, connected it to the first, and converted
the original circuit to 3-way.

I was trying to avoid ganging another switch for aesthetic reasons,
thus the double 3-way switch question.
out of curiosity, is a double 3-way switch even made?
you'd think it'd be easy enough to make, would need 7 screws

homi



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:11 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter