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Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Question & Answer Forum
Bathroom fan signal live wire on a dimmer - okay or not?
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<blockquote data-quote="Alla Musica" data-source="post: 553227" data-attributes="member: 37613"><p>[ATTACH=full]16446[/ATTACH]</p><p>I would assume this is pretty much the norm? This is my 5th year in the UK and, according to my past experiences while visiting my friends' places, the above arrangement (cr. Vent-Axia) is the most common one (though yes with exceptions)...?</p><p></p><p></p><p>Welp, I don't have such a fan myself - so if anyone out there knows, apparently I then won't have to buy a fan just for the experiment... </p><p></p><p></p><p>Yes - I wonder how far I can dim the lights down without activating the overrun timer...</p><p></p><p></p><p>Ah, that's interesting - did you mean that normally the signal terminal needs to have a potential of 0V (or almost 0V) for the timer to kick in?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Alla Musica, post: 553227, member: 37613"] [ATTACH type="full" width="417px"]16446[/ATTACH] I would assume this is pretty much the norm? This is my 5th year in the UK and, according to my past experiences while visiting my friends' places, the above arrangement (cr. Vent-Axia) is the most common one (though yes with exceptions)...? Welp, I don't have such a fan myself - so if anyone out there knows, apparently I then won't have to buy a fan just for the experiment... Yes - I wonder how far I can dim the lights down without activating the overrun timer... Ah, that's interesting - did you mean that normally the signal terminal needs to have a potential of 0V (or almost 0V) for the timer to kick in? [/QUOTE]
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Bathroom fan signal live wire on a dimmer - okay or not?
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