millerpim
May 27, 2007, 10:56 AM
Hello everybody:
I am new to this board and hope there is somebody around this Memorial Day Weekend who can help. I just bought a Modern Fan Company Aurora Hugger ceiling fan and am trying to install it. This fan has no pull cords and operates on a remote that is tucked into the fan housing. Apart from the missing set screws, which seem to be no where and I can't get them at the hardware store because I have tried, I have two other problems.
Please don't laugh. The previous ceiling fan was operated by a light switch. Far as I know, this switch only operates the fan. It turns on the fan, the old fan, and it let me pull the chain to turn on the light, so I could turn the fan on and off with the switch. I could also pull the pull chain for the fan and even if the wall switch was on, the fan would not work. OK.
So now I've taken the switch off the wall. It looks like it is a 3-way switch, but there were only two wires connected to it. One on each side. One black and one white. Now, I know enough to know that this should probably a single pole switch and it should have two black wires or at the very least one black and one white with the white marked black.
But, no, I have one black and one white wire. The remote that mounts into the box has 2 black wires and one green wire. I do not have a grounding wire in that box in the wall.
My question is what do I do? Do I assume the white wire is really black and blow up the house? Do I connect both black wires from the remote to the black and cap off the white? I am very confused because the black and the white ran the switch before.
I do have another switch on this wall that I leave on all the time. If I turn it off, it turns off the receptacles into which my TV, DVD are plugged. I suppose it is possible that the fan switch could be a 3-way, but I would think it would need more wires than the two that are there.
My next question is the ceiling. It is made from cedar, the old 11 3/4" cedar from 1948. The panels are set on the diagonal, so I have four corners coming together in the center of the ceiling. This is the spot where the ceiling fan goes. The old ceiling fan was put up on a rectangular plate that ran across two of the panels. The new ceiling fan uses a round plate.
The problem is one of those four corners is raised. So the plate won't sit flat. The fan housing mounts on the plate and there is no faux cover. Any ideas?
I feel like I am so close yet so far away from putting in this ceiling fan. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
Elizabeth
I am new to this board and hope there is somebody around this Memorial Day Weekend who can help. I just bought a Modern Fan Company Aurora Hugger ceiling fan and am trying to install it. This fan has no pull cords and operates on a remote that is tucked into the fan housing. Apart from the missing set screws, which seem to be no where and I can't get them at the hardware store because I have tried, I have two other problems.
Please don't laugh. The previous ceiling fan was operated by a light switch. Far as I know, this switch only operates the fan. It turns on the fan, the old fan, and it let me pull the chain to turn on the light, so I could turn the fan on and off with the switch. I could also pull the pull chain for the fan and even if the wall switch was on, the fan would not work. OK.
So now I've taken the switch off the wall. It looks like it is a 3-way switch, but there were only two wires connected to it. One on each side. One black and one white. Now, I know enough to know that this should probably a single pole switch and it should have two black wires or at the very least one black and one white with the white marked black.
But, no, I have one black and one white wire. The remote that mounts into the box has 2 black wires and one green wire. I do not have a grounding wire in that box in the wall.
My question is what do I do? Do I assume the white wire is really black and blow up the house? Do I connect both black wires from the remote to the black and cap off the white? I am very confused because the black and the white ran the switch before.
I do have another switch on this wall that I leave on all the time. If I turn it off, it turns off the receptacles into which my TV, DVD are plugged. I suppose it is possible that the fan switch could be a 3-way, but I would think it would need more wires than the two that are there.
My next question is the ceiling. It is made from cedar, the old 11 3/4" cedar from 1948. The panels are set on the diagonal, so I have four corners coming together in the center of the ceiling. This is the spot where the ceiling fan goes. The old ceiling fan was put up on a rectangular plate that ran across two of the panels. The new ceiling fan uses a round plate.
The problem is one of those four corners is raised. So the plate won't sit flat. The fan housing mounts on the plate and there is no faux cover. Any ideas?
I feel like I am so close yet so far away from putting in this ceiling fan. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
Elizabeth