Anonymous wrote:Your builder has a surplus of one fan and wants to unload it on you. They pull this all the time.
I'm having a deck built and the contractor insisted it could only be one shade of gray composite. "I can't do brown it's a special order." I didn't hire him.
Anonymous wrote:I replaced a standard flush mount ceiling light for a fan/ light combo in my 1960s split and was told by my electrician that one switch couldn't work both fan and light unless the fan had one of those pull chains that independently turned the fan on. He told me that in these old house there was only a single wire system used. Newer houses have a 2 wire system. I hate those pull chains so I installed a fan that had a separate remote that was wall mounted. The switch works the light and the remote works the fan and also turns on/ dims the light.
Anonymous wrote:Below is a photo of the wall control that came with our fan
I'm not very handy but after spending an hour with the installation instructions, YouTube videos, and a voltage tester, I was able to wire it correctly without injuring myself, even through the wiring was quite different than the old fan.
https://www.kichlerlightingexperts.com/lighting/7-196-826-0-735198/Kichler-Lighting_Accessory---4.5-Inch-65K-Limited-Function-Wall-Transmitter-371062MULTR.htm
Anonymous wrote:Anyone ever hear this? He says they are all remote control now and says he cant have the fan on one switch and the light on another.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone ever hear this? He says they are all remote control now and says he cant have the fan on one switch and the light on another.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have some very expensive fans and they were installed last year. I have both a remote and a wall switch. We never use the remote. The wall switch is really neat- we can control speed and dim the lights from it.
This, how are they getting electricity???