2 wire lighting PIR, inline timer fan problem. | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss 2 wire lighting PIR, inline timer fan problem. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

R

RedSnedd1903

Morning all. I have a problem on a Job were working on at the moment. I have a small toilet area fitted with a number of LED lights and an in line timer fan. They are both controlled from a 2 wire ceiling PIR. The problem is once the lights switch on initially the fan comes on also but once the lights switch off in the toilet ,the fan stays on forever. Even though the timers down to 1 minute. Checked the connections at the fan and they are correct although when the lights switch off I am still getting 50V on the switch wire. I am assuming this voltage is what is keeping the van running.

Thoughts anyone.
 
Unfortunately the led lights are all sealed units. The fan is in an adjacent attic space as there is no access above the toilet area. The guy who fitted the PIR and lights threw out the instructions but mentioned that they had said something about a capacitor being fitted to the unit for circuits with a low load.
 
This will NOT be my strong point, but could this not just be a faulty timer function on the fan?

The effect that capacitance has on LED lights can sometimes lead them to stay on very dimly when switched off, but I cant see this keeping a 230V fan going? Also I cant see 50V keeping the fan going?

Could be very wrong though and looking forward to the other replies.....
 
Unfortunately the led lights are all sealed units. The fan is in an adjacent attic space as there is no access above the toilet area. The guy who fitted the PIR and lights threw out the instructions but mentioned that they had said something about a capacitor being fitted to the unit for circuits with a low load.

OK, so just as temporary diagnostic measure, lash a 25W (or smaller) GLS lamp in a batten lampholder in the attic space, wired across the switched live and neutral of the fan and see what happens.


This will NOT be my strong point, but could this not just be a faulty timer function on the fan?

The effect that capacitance has on LED lights can sometimes lead them to stay on very dimly when switched off, but I cant see this keeping a 230V fan going? Also I cant see 50V keeping the fan going?

Could be very wrong though and looking forward to the other replies.....

This is a timer fan, so the switched live will just be providing the trigger for the fan timer and will need very little current. The main power for the fan will be via the permanent live.
 
Cheers for the replies guys. I ended up replacing the PIR with a new one( neutral connection ) and it done the trick. Davesparks and handyspark I think you hit the nail on the head there. Thanks for the replies guys. Think I understand how it works better now.
 

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