Dimmer Switch/light Switch
I am currently remodeling a bedroom in my home for a new baby. I have gutted the room and am replacing all the electrical and adding new recessed lighting. The room will also have a ceiling fan, along with the recessed lighting. I am looking for a single gang light switch that will operate the ceiling fan independently of the recessed lighting, with a dimmer for the recessed lighting. I don't have room for a double gang box where the switch is currently placed, as there is a closet in the way. Is there such a thing as a switch that will operate the ceiling fan and it's lighting on a normal on/off switch, with a dimmer that can independently control the recessed lighting? I have checked with the local big box stores and everyone has told me I will have to run two switches. Is this the case? Any info would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
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Can you install 6 recessed light off of one circuit by starting at a switch that is designed to turn an outlet on and off for a lamp that sits on a table. i've determined all of the outlets in one room are on the same circuit. The max wattage that will be used in that room if all recessed lights and TV etc are on would be approx. 1,500. the electrical wire in place is 14 g.
Hey guys and gals,
got a very odd dilemma, in my dining room there is a chandelier lamp that is controlled through a dimmer switch(even though it is not a dimmer). There is also a closet with a light switch as well. The odd circumstance i am having is when the closet light is on(via its own switch), and you turn on the dinning room light, the closet light goes out. Then if you turn the dining room light off,the closet light turns back on. The closest light switch has zero effect on the dining room light, the dining room light seems to have control over the closet light and dining room light. Any ideas on a fix. I was thing just replacing the dimmer(once again does not actually dim) with a single pole interrupter. I just dont want to burn my house down
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Thank you
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Thanks Tom
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hi everyone.
i am installing 4" recessed lighting throughout my main floor. my house was built in the 40's and the previous owner installed drywall over the existing lath and plaster ceiling. so I've cut a trench down the center of my room to drill floor joists to run wiring and cut my holes for the new lights. the lights are fire rated and do not require insulated cans for a traditional installation in a drywall ceiling. question i have is with the additional 1/2 to 3/4" of lath and plaster above the drywall, should these lights now have insulated cans or should i be fine with the cans I've got? there is no insulation in ceiling. any suggested would be appreciated. thanks d
Having a brain freeze, if someone could take a moment to explain this to me, it would be greatly appriciated. I am wiring four recessed lights in a bedroom, off one switch. I am going to grab power off an outlet. Does the power have to go into the switch box first and then out to the first light? and then on to the others? Can I get power from an outlet and then wire each of the lights and bring the last one to the switch box? I dont want the switch to control the outlet, just the recesed and I am trying to determine where I can get the power from and if it has to go into the switchbox? I am drawing a blank.
Thanks! |