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Fine and well, if you have access from above. These "contraptions" IMHO,
having installed literally hundreds of fans, are the best things since sliced bread. The good ones like Westinghouse 01100, you could do chin-ups on wrote in message oups.com... On Jun 4, 7:06 pm, "RBM" rbm2(remove wrote: They actually make a "fancake" box for mounting on the beam "Mikepier" wrote in message ups.com... What I've done in the past is buy one of those round "pancake" electrical boxes and screw it directly to the joist. You still have plenty of room to tuck the wires in the housing of the fan. Of course this would only work if the joist was centered in the room, but in your case your talking only being off by a maximum of 5" off center being that your joists are 10" apart.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - -------------------------------------- The trouble is that OP has already cut the hole, and it would be take careful mud work to conceal the hole. I never buy any of these ready- to-use contraptions. I simply build my own out of lumber to fit between exisiting joists. Using a 2x4 as a base board, I secure (using screws) two vertical end pieces out of 3/4" plywood stock and assemble the contraption to look like a flat bottom U (like this | ___|) --measured to fit snugly between the joists, of course. I then affix the junction box to the bottom of the base board making sure to drill a hole for the cable to reach the junction box. ALL THESE STEPS ARE DONE IN MY SHOP. Now, with the hole in the cieling already cut, I simply drop my contraption between the joists and secure the vertical end pieces by screws or bolts. Now this may not be code, but the bracket could not be any stronger and it will definitely hold the weight of the fan. I have done this with four different fans and they are still holding now over 20 years later. |
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