S
shedbuilder
Hi folks,
I have a customer who currently has a bathroom fan switched from the room's lighting circuit. The fan has a timer, and so is also has a permanent live. All of this supplied through a fan isolator, so perfectly correct.
The guy is annoyed at night by other people using the bathroom, switching the light on, and then having the fan run on for 10 mins. Rather than reduce the timer time, he'd like the fan to be switched by the power to the electric over-bath shower. The switch is a ceiling mounted pull-cord, and the fan wiring is in the loft, so all perfectly doable.
I've no problem with this. I was going to take the fan power from the permanent side of the shower switch & the fan switched from the switched side of the shower switch (and obviously neutral also from the shower). The slight inconvenience is that it means installing two fuses, one per line conductor (I was just going to use 2x FCUs, heavily labelled as to what their function is) to protect the 0.75mm^2 fan wiring, since upstream will be the 45A shower MCB.
However, it got me wondering... Is there a better solution? The product I'd really like to find is some sort of switch that will sense current in one circuit (the shower), and switch current in another circuit (the fan) while keeping the circuits electrically seperated. That way I could leave the fan on the lighting circuit (no need to bother with the additional FCUs), and have the fan switched by the shower actually being operated, rather than just when it receives power.
Anyone know if such a product exists, or offer any better solutions?
Thanks in Advance.
I have a customer who currently has a bathroom fan switched from the room's lighting circuit. The fan has a timer, and so is also has a permanent live. All of this supplied through a fan isolator, so perfectly correct.
The guy is annoyed at night by other people using the bathroom, switching the light on, and then having the fan run on for 10 mins. Rather than reduce the timer time, he'd like the fan to be switched by the power to the electric over-bath shower. The switch is a ceiling mounted pull-cord, and the fan wiring is in the loft, so all perfectly doable.
I've no problem with this. I was going to take the fan power from the permanent side of the shower switch & the fan switched from the switched side of the shower switch (and obviously neutral also from the shower). The slight inconvenience is that it means installing two fuses, one per line conductor (I was just going to use 2x FCUs, heavily labelled as to what their function is) to protect the 0.75mm^2 fan wiring, since upstream will be the 45A shower MCB.
However, it got me wondering... Is there a better solution? The product I'd really like to find is some sort of switch that will sense current in one circuit (the shower), and switch current in another circuit (the fan) while keeping the circuits electrically seperated. That way I could leave the fan on the lighting circuit (no need to bother with the additional FCUs), and have the fan switched by the shower actually being operated, rather than just when it receives power.
Anyone know if such a product exists, or offer any better solutions?
Thanks in Advance.