Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater

I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. Any help appreciated.
  #2   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,199
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater

On Jun 1, 12:44*pm, Bill McKenzie wrote:
I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? *The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. *Any help appreciated.


It's ok, that's what is usually done. Just make sure you know which
wire is which.
Are you sure the black wire is larger than the white? Both are usually
the same guage in a romex or BX wire.
You should also have a ground wire. And this device should be on its
own circuit since a heater is involved. At least 12 guage wire.
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,563
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater


"Bill McKenzie" wrote in message
...
I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. Any help appreciated.


First of all, you need a dedicated 20 amp circuit for the unit. The easiest
way to wire the unit is to run the #12/2 feed into the switch box, then get
either a piece of 12/4 cable to go from the switch to the unit, or use
flexible metal, or non metallic conduit, and pull 4 #12 conductors, plus a
ground, from the switch to the unit. Most of these units now also include a
night light, if yours does you'll need one more conductor from switch to
unit


  #4   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,679
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater

Bill McKenzie wrote:
I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. Any help appreciated.


nope. what you need to do is run either a single 12/4 if such a thing
exists, or a piece of greenfield with six conductors in it (black, red,
blue, ?? (orange?) white and green. Otherwise you need to split the
neutrals and replace one of your 12/2wg's with a 12/3wg. Reason being
that all the currents in a given cable assembly need to sum to zero.

nate

--
replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.
http://members.cox.net/njnagel
  #5   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,679
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater

Nate Nagel wrote:
Bill McKenzie wrote:

I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. Any help appreciated.



nope. what you need to do is run either a single 12/4 if such a thing
exists, or a piece of greenfield with six conductors in it (black, red,
blue, ?? (orange?) white and green. Otherwise you need to split the
neutrals and replace one of your 12/2wg's with a 12/3wg. Reason being
that all the currents in a given cable assembly need to sum to zero.

nate


Oops I meant five conductors. I was getting your post confused with one
from very recently. That poster was using a fan/heater/light/night
light combo.

nate

--
replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.
http://members.cox.net/njnagel


  #6   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,934
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater


"Nate Nagel" wrote in message
...
Bill McKenzie wrote:
I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. Any help appreciated.


nope. what you need to do is run either a single 12/4 if such a thing
exists, or a piece of greenfield with six conductors in it (black, red,
blue, ?? (orange?) white and green. Otherwise you need to split the
neutrals and replace one of your 12/2wg's with a 12/3wg. Reason being
that all the currents in a given cable assembly need to sum to zero.

nate



The return currents only sum to zero when opposite phases are involved.
With multiple switch conductors the sum of the neutral current will be equal
to the total load in use at any given time.

  #7   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
N8N N8N is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,192
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater

On Jun 1, 8:22*pm, "John Grabowski" wrote:
"Nate Nagel" wrote in message

...





Bill McKenzie wrote:
I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? *The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. *Any help appreciated.


nope. *what you need to do is run either a single 12/4 if such a thing
exists, or a piece of greenfield with six conductors in it (black, red,
blue, ?? (orange?) white and green. *Otherwise you need to split the
neutrals and replace one of your 12/2wg's with a 12/3wg. *Reason being
that all the currents in a given cable assembly need to sum to zero.


nate


The return currents only sum to zero when opposite phases are involved.


Correct.

With multiple switch conductors the sum of the neutral current will be equal
to the total load in use at any given time.


Also correct. What is required is that the neutral current and the
sum of the "hot" currents be equal and opposite within a cable
assembly. If the OP has two cables going to the fan and repurposes
one of the neutrals to serve as a hot, and then combines all neutrals
into one, then one of the cables will have all of its current flowing
in the "hot" direction. (it helps to visualize this better if you
think of this as a DC circuit, even though it's not.)

nate
  #8   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater

On Jun 2, 9:41*am, N8N wrote:
On Jun 1, 8:22*pm, "John Grabowski" wrote:





"Nate Nagel" wrote in message


...


Bill McKenzie wrote:
I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? *The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. *Any help appreciated.


nope. *what you need to do is run either a single 12/4 if such a thing
exists, or a piece of greenfield with six conductors in it (black, red,
blue, ?? (orange?) white and green. *Otherwise you need to split the
neutrals and replace one of your 12/2wg's with a 12/3wg. *Reason being
that all the currents in a given cable assembly need to sum to zero.


nate


The return currents only sum to zero when opposite phases are involved.


Correct.

With multiple switch conductors the sum of the neutral current will be equal
to the total load in use at any given time.


Also correct. *What is required is that the neutral current and the
sum of the "hot" currents be equal and opposite within a cable
assembly. *If the OP has two cables going to the fan and repurposes
one of the neutrals to serve as a hot, and then combines all neutrals
into one, then one of the cables will have all of its current flowing
in the "hot" direction. *(it helps to visualize this better if you
think of this as a DC circuit, even though it's not.)

nate- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Thanks for the responses. Your explanation makes sense, Nate, but can
I ask what the risk is of having unbalanced loads in the two cables?
Is it possible this would have been allowed 30 years ago but not now?
Reason is, we have an older house (about 30 yrs) with 6 bathrooms. 5
of them have an older heater/fan/light combo, all identical and when I
take the plate off the switches they all have the same cabling: one
10/2 coming in, and a 10/2 and 12/2 going out. About 10 years ago
(before we bought it) someone took the fan out of one of the
bathrooms, leaving the old wiring in place and I want to put a new one
in. I'd really like to avoid re-wiring (it's fastened to the studs in
the wall), but I dont want to burn my house down either.
  #9   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,679
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater

Bill McKenzie wrote:
On Jun 2, 9:41 am, N8N wrote:

On Jun 1, 8:22 pm, "John Grabowski" wrote:






"Nate Nagel" wrote in message


...


Bill McKenzie wrote:

I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. Any help appreciated.


nope. what you need to do is run either a single 12/4 if such a thing
exists, or a piece of greenfield with six conductors in it (black, red,
blue, ?? (orange?) white and green. Otherwise you need to split the
neutrals and replace one of your 12/2wg's with a 12/3wg. Reason being
that all the currents in a given cable assembly need to sum to zero.


nate


The return currents only sum to zero when opposite phases are involved.


Correct.


With multiple switch conductors the sum of the neutral current will be equal
to the total load in use at any given time.


Also correct. What is required is that the neutral current and the
sum of the "hot" currents be equal and opposite within a cable
assembly. If the OP has two cables going to the fan and repurposes
one of the neutrals to serve as a hot, and then combines all neutrals
into one, then one of the cables will have all of its current flowing
in the "hot" direction. (it helps to visualize this better if you
think of this as a DC circuit, even though it's not.)

nate- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -



Thanks for the responses. Your explanation makes sense, Nate, but can
I ask what the risk is of having unbalanced loads in the two cables?
Is it possible this would have been allowed 30 years ago but not now?
Reason is, we have an older house (about 30 yrs) with 6 bathrooms. 5
of them have an older heater/fan/light combo, all identical and when I
take the plate off the switches they all have the same cabling: one
10/2 coming in, and a 10/2 and 12/2 going out. About 10 years ago
(before we bought it) someone took the fan out of one of the
bathrooms, leaving the old wiring in place and I want to put a new one
in. I'd really like to avoid re-wiring (it's fastened to the studs in
the wall), but I dont want to burn my house down either.


I don't believe that it's fundamentally horribly dangerous; certainly
not as dangerous as, say, a splice outside a junction box or such like,
but it *is* against code. I believe that the reason for this particular
code is that there exists a possibility of inductive heating which
could, in a rare but not completely impossible circumstance, cause a
fire or other undesirable occurrance.

It's up to you what you want to do, but if it were I that was doing
this, if it wouldn't be too difficult I would try to run some Greenfield
between the wall box and the ceiling unit so that you could "do it
right." Not seeing your particular bathroom I have no idea if this
could be easily done with making only one or two holes or if it'd turn
into a near re-do.

nate

--
replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.
http://members.cox.net/njnagel
  #10   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,563
Default Help wiring light/fan/heater


"Bill McKenzie" wrote in message
...
On Jun 2, 9:41 am, N8N wrote:
On Jun 1, 8:22 pm, "John Grabowski" wrote:





"Nate Nagel" wrote in message


...


Bill McKenzie wrote:
I am trying to install a combination light/fan/heater in a bathroom.
There are already 2 sets of wires going from the switch box to the
ceiling location, but I need 3 (one for each light, fan, heater).
Would it be OK to share a single neutral for all three devices and
use
the extra white wire in the second cable as an additional hot? The
two cable are different colors (black and white) and the black seems
to have larger gauge wire than the white. Any help appreciated.


nope. what you need to do is run either a single 12/4 if such a thing
exists, or a piece of greenfield with six conductors in it (black,
red,
blue, ?? (orange?) white and green. Otherwise you need to split the
neutrals and replace one of your 12/2wg's with a 12/3wg. Reason being
that all the currents in a given cable assembly need to sum to zero.


nate


The return currents only sum to zero when opposite phases are involved.


Correct.

With multiple switch conductors the sum of the neutral current will be
equal
to the total load in use at any given time.


Also correct. What is required is that the neutral current and the
sum of the "hot" currents be equal and opposite within a cable
assembly. If the OP has two cables going to the fan and repurposes
one of the neutrals to serve as a hot, and then combines all neutrals
into one, then one of the cables will have all of its current flowing
in the "hot" direction. (it helps to visualize this better if you
think of this as a DC circuit, even though it's not.)

nate- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Thanks for the responses. Your explanation makes sense, Nate, but can
I ask what the risk is of having unbalanced loads in the two cables?
Is it possible this would have been allowed 30 years ago but not now?
Reason is, we have an older house (about 30 yrs) with 6 bathrooms. 5
of them have an older heater/fan/light combo, all identical and when I
take the plate off the switches they all have the same cabling: one
10/2 coming in, and a 10/2 and 12/2 going out. About 10 years ago
(before we bought it) someone took the fan out of one of the
bathrooms, leaving the old wiring in place and I want to put a new one
in. I'd really like to avoid re-wiring (it's fastened to the studs in
the wall), but I dont want to burn my house down either.

It's gonna be real fun trying to squeeze a 10/2 into that tiny junction box.
The code requires all the circuit conductors be run in the same cable. You
have three devices, so you need neutral and three hot conductors, plus
ground. What you have isn't correct and hasn't ever been correct. At the
very least, you'll need to scrap the 10/2 and use a 12/3, plus the existing
12/2. You'll run three hots and two neutrals, plus grounds




Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Light bulbs as a heater Bob Urz Electronics Repair 6 November 26th 07 05:08 PM
gas heater and light Cuprager UK diy 12 August 10th 06 09:28 PM
light wiring MP UK diy 0 January 23rd 05 11:12 AM
light wiring Nigel UK diy 15 May 17th 04 08:53 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:40 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"