#3 · Dec 2, 2024 You had a switch - you removed that switch and connected the wires - you now have an always-on circuit. I can't say I've ever heard of an occupancy/motion sensor for a fan in a residential setting. A manual switch on a ceiling sounds very inconvenient. ___...
Remove the old light fixture by undoing the mounting nut and any other mounting hardware that holds it in place. Pull the fixture down gently and disconnect the wires in the fixture from the ones that feed out of your ceiling. Set the old light fixture aside. Install a Brace and Fan-rate...
Reinstall the light pull-switch into the circuit. Terminate the hot and neutral wires with the appropriate wire bundle using twist-on wire connectors. After the completion of this step, there should be 4 white wires connected bound with one twist-on wire connector, and 2 black wires bound ...
The control has 4 wires coming out of it: 2 of them are attached to each other only, one goes to the power (black), and one goes to the fan (brown). The switch has a main on/off switch, an up/down light control, a 3-step fan control, and a program/reverse switch (which ...
The great part about changing light fixtures is that it’s a pretty universal process. The light boxes in your ceiling are all the same size, and it’s always the same three wires being connected/disconnected. No need to research your particular situation other than making sure the size of...
In my current house, there is a switch in the guest room which turns on the ceiling fan. The switch next to it turns on the light, at which point the ceiling fan goes off. I haven’t had tome to resolve the problem yet, but I did disconnect the ceiling fan completely, because ...