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Richard Faulkner October 26th 03 11:24 PM

Showers & Fans in Bathroom
 
Hi,

I have had a bath and a fan fitted in my bathroom, and would like a
shower over the bath.

My builders tell me that you cannot have a shower head within a certain
distance of a fan, or other electrical thing. However, they are not sure
of the distance, and someone has told them 15ft, which is obviously
wrong g

The fan will be around 6ft away horizontally, and 3ft above the shower
head, if I can have one.

Anyone know the answer, or the location of the latest regs.?
--
Richard Faulkner

Andy Hall October 27th 03 12:07 AM

Showers & Fans in Bathroom
 
On Sun, 26 Oct 2003 23:24:06 +0000, Richard Faulkner
wrote:

Hi,

I have had a bath and a fan fitted in my bathroom, and would like a
shower over the bath.

My builders tell me that you cannot have a shower head within a certain
distance of a fan, or other electrical thing. However, they are not sure
of the distance, and someone has told them 15ft, which is obviously
wrong g


Yes, because the Wiring Regulations use metres.


The fan will be around 6ft away horizontally, and 3ft above the shower
head, if I can have one.

Anyone know the answer, or the location of the latest regs.?


For bathrooms there is a system of zones.

http://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Book/7.2.2A.htm

describes them.

Basically, if the ceiling is more than 3m high, then the fan would be
outside zones.

For a ceiling between 2.25 and 3m high and Zone 3 applies in the space
between these two heights for a distance horizontally to 0.6m from the
edges of the bath.

For a ceiling less than 2.2m high, Zone 2 applies for the 0.6m from
the edges of the bath and Zone 3 from there for a further 2.4m.

So for your scenario, I think that it will be Zone 3 or no zone.

In any case you can fit a fan that is stated to be suitable for
bathroom use.


Another option is that you can fit a SELV (12v) fan anywhere apart
from in the bath itself.......




..andy

To email, substitute .nospam with .gl

Chris J Dixon October 27th 03 05:49 PM

Showers & Fans in Bathroom
 
Andy Hall wrote:

For bathrooms there is a system of zones.

http://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Book/7.2.2A.htm

describes them.

Basically, if the ceiling is more than 3m high, then the fan would be
outside zones.

For a ceiling between 2.25 and 3m high and Zone 3 applies in the space
between these two heights for a distance horizontally to 0.6m from the
edges of the bath.

For a ceiling less than 2.2m high, Zone 2 applies for the 0.6m from
the edges of the bath and Zone 3 from there for a further 2.4m.

So for your scenario, I think that it will be Zone 3 or no zone.

In any case you can fit a fan that is stated to be suitable for
bathroom use.

Does this still apply if the fan is ducted and in the ceiling
void? Even with a lowish ceiling, the actual fan is well beyond
being accessible.

Chris
--
Chris J Dixon Nottingham UK


Have dancing shoes, will ceilidh.

ARWadsworth October 27th 03 06:45 PM

Showers & Fans in Bathroom
 
Does this still apply if the fan is ducted and in the ceiling
void? Even with a lowish ceiling, the actual fan is well beyond
being accessible.

Chris


If you mean an inline fan with ducting either side of it, then yes you can
use a 230v fan with the grill directly above the bath/shower even if the
ceiling is low. The installation will be outside zones.

--
Adam





N. Thornton October 28th 03 12:37 PM

Showers & Fans in Bathroom
 
Andy Hall wrote in message . ..

Another option is that you can fit a SELV (12v) fan anywhere apart
from in the bath itself.......



Spoilsport! :)

Regards, NT


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