tranquility
Senior Member
So, do I attach the negative to the positive or the positive to the negative?
Legally speaking, of course.
Legally speaking, of course.
Where does it say a carpenter cannot connect a few wires together? Are you saying that I as the owner cannot legally put a fan in my own property? If I can, then I can also hire someone(anyone) to do it for me.
So, do I attach the negative to the positive or the positive to the negative?
Legally speaking, of course.
what happens if you don't have one white and one black?
and deciding where to "wrap" the green is a matter of being legal or not.
and I already spoke to why an electrician is the proper trade to install the fan.
alaska, you really take the cake. Now you are suggesting the tenant do electrical work in a rental unit. Not only is that most likely illegal, it is foolish for a LL to allow such work be done by an unqualified person.
and no, a carpenter cannot do it just as well. The electrician can legally install the fan, including the wiring and box. A carpenter can't.
Is some states, you can do your own electrical on your own personal residence. In some, you can't
In a few you might be able to do electrical work in a rental unit you own but very often can't because of the fact it is a business and as such, the electrical work would require the use of a licensed electrician.
. In any state that licenses electricians, you cannot simply hire "anyone" to do the work in your stead. If licensing is required, working for hire would almost always invoke the requirement for the work to be performed by a licensed electrician.
every state in the country has different laws and rules. Many local municipalities also have their own rules and ordinances. Local cannot override state laws/rules but they can add whatever they want.
Of course, I remember now, Westinghouse won.there is no negative or positive with AC electricity. It alternates 60 times per second (in the US. Much of the rest of the world it would be 50 times per second) so each wire is "positive" while the other is "negative" and then they reverse and repeat this 60 times per second.
You need a CARPENTER to install a ceiling fan - not an ELECTRICIAN - a carpenter can block and make sure it is supported properly IN THE CEILING - connecting the electrical/wires is easy....I've done it.
You are borrowing trouble....find a repairman/handyman who has probably installed hundreds of fans and have them do it...don't pay more than $100 since you already have the fan
CV - you even get it wrong on NON-LL/T related stuff
ELECTRICIANS install fans all the time - it's part of their job, INCLUDING making sure that the electrical box is appropriately supported.
there is no negative or positive with AC electricity. It alternates 60 times per second (in the US. Much of the rest of the world it would be 50 times per second) so each wire is "positive" while the other is "negative" and then they reverse and repeat this 60 times per second.
I think this was another intentionally absurd posts from CV. I hope she wouldn't advise a tenant to do electrical work on their apartment, or have a non-electrician do electrical work on an apartment, or go directly against the permission given by the landlord and have a handyman do a job that requires an electrician per the landlord and law. The only right thing in the post was the possibility of needing additional support to hold up the fan.
More and more properties are being wired with low voltage circuits for LED lighting. It is possible to run into DC circuits in the US. Not that you would run a ceiling fan off of a low voltage circuit.
In a 120v circuit, only one of the wires is hot, not switching back and forth. You only need one wire and a ground to use the electricity (but not code or safe, don't run a light off of a switch wire and ground). The ~120 volts is the potential between the hot wire and the neutral. 240v circuits have the 240 volt potential between two 110 volt hot wires.
I think this was another intentionally absurd posts from CV. I hope she wouldn't advise a tenant to do electrical work on their apartment, or have a non-electrician do electrical work on an apartment, or go directly against the permission given by the landlord and have a handyman do a job that requires an electrician per the landlord and law. The only right thing in the post was the possibility of needing additional support to hold up the fan.
You received some good answers and some very bad answers.What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? NJ
I recently moved and the LL gave me permission to have an electrician install a ceiling fan in the bedrooms (they have light fixtures but no fans). Anyway the electrician came today and told me the wiring is outdated, not up to code, and can catch fire any moment. He claims instead of plastic covers the wires are covered it is some type of fabric. He advised me NOT to install the ceiling fans so out of fear of starting a fire I didn't. After I called my Insurance company to make sure my renters policy was all in order and active, I tried to do a google search to find out where can I find out for sure if the electrical is okay. I don't think the electrician would lie to me, he didn't charge me since he didn't finish so what does he have to gain. However other tenants have ceiling fans and the place hasn't sparked yet so maybe he overreacted, I don't know I am not an electrician. Does anyone know if there is a website/department/agency that handles this?
In case it matters for your answer I don't know the age of the building but it is at least 25 years old (the oldest tenant here has been living here 25 years and told me the building has been in the family for years), the LL lives in FL and has never lived here, the building has 4 apts total, and the power goes out a lot.
I always turned off the circut breaker and checked with a meter before touching bare (bear?) wire. Even then, based on advice of my, then, brother-in-law to be with similar credentials as justalayman, I always touched the wire with the *back* of my hand first. It was an old house and the circut breaker "map" I made was not always accurate and I must have been careless on how to set the meter a couple of times as I had two yummy electrical parties in my duties. Glad I didn't grab tight from muscle contraction because of the third safety.it hurts like a MF when you get hit with 277 volts with the contact points being each wrist.