I installed one fairly recently, when quoting had a quick look in the loft, yep no probs, can bring the duct up thru the unboarded loft and back out thru the soffit, lovely.I went to replace my neighbour's fan ,in loft , bathroom fitters had left 3 m of flexiduct lying between the joists, not ducted out, with at least half a bucketful of water inside it!! And a local bathroom fitting shop ,now finished, used to exhaust ceiling fans straight into the loft .
Couldnt agree more. the unskilled worker doesnt hold water with me if they accessing live parts they should be competent to do so, also pretty sure manuf instructions asks for a electrician to work on the fan not any old joe.Let's play devils advocate here.Am I the ONLY electrician who's been asked by letting agents or landlords, to go and REMOVE the fan isolator switch, to stop the tenants from turning the fan off (because it's noisy) and ending up with damp mouldy bathrooms?
I've never seen the point in them myself. A competent electrician will know how to isolate the supply to replace a fan, even one with a permanent live feed for an over run timer. After all we don't have an isolator next to each ceiling rose so we can isolate the supply when one of those needs replacing.
And blow the fuse or trip the RCD. How many Joe public will then know they have to switch the fan isolator off to restore power?I personally think that they should be fitted from a fire safety point of view.You have to remember that extractor fans are basically a motor, and if you stop a motors rotor from turning (siezed bearings) it will overheat
But that only provides EXACTLY the same "maintenance isolation" as turning off the MCB in the consumer unit doesn't it.And blow the fuse or trip the RCD. How many Joe public will then know they have to switch the fan isolator off to restore power?One solution is to supply the bathroom light from the switched side of the isolator - ensures the fan has to be on from a landlords point of view but also provides maintenance isolation.
Are you saying then that you have never been out to a siezed extractor fan???,,, because all the ones that I've been to haven't tripped anything:OAnd blow the fuse or trip the RCD. How many Joe public will then know they have to switch the fan isolator off to restore power?One solution is to supply the bathroom light from the switched side of the isolator - ensures the fan has to be on from a landlords point of view but also provides maintenance isolation.
I've replaced seized bathroom fans, but they are such tiny motors, they don't seem to get particularly hot or bothered sitting there, energised but not rotating.Are you saying then that you have never been out to a siezed extractor fan???,,, because all the ones that I've been to haven't tripped anything:O
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