Damage an exhaust fan by temporarily replacing a 20-amp switch with a 5-amp one?
Obviously a 5-amp switch can't replace a 20-amp switch. But here's what happened and why I'm stumped.
In my old house, a previous owner's refit of a bathroom involved putting in a fairly high-powered exhaust fan, controlled by a switch that you twist to set how long you want it to run for. It looked very industrial, and on a whim while I was at the hardware store, I picked up a more modern one with push-button controls and installed it.
I hadn't realized I'd taken out a 20-amp switch and replaced it with a 5-amp one. No wonder it didn't work. The fan whined but didn't turn, and after a short time there was an audible electrical POP! And everything shut down. I'd stepped out of the bathroom and didn't hear where the sound came from.
So I turned the breaker off again, figured out what I'd done wrong, went out and bought a 20-amp switch. Now I've installed it; the LED lights on the switch activate and show there's power running through it and the different timer settings all light up properly. But no matter what, the fan does nothing. Not even the sad buzz it made when I tried to run it on the 5-amp switch.
All I can think is that I somehow damaged the motor -- although my amateur's instinct is that'd be hard to do by feeding the motor too little electricity rather than too much.
Any advice? Do I need to change the motor in the fan?