Discuss New Bathroom Extractor Fan - Wiring Query in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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Hi,

I'm looking to install a new bathroom extractor fan in my bathroom as I have a windowless bathroom and the current one I have installed in bathroom ceiling is just a standard one and isn't powerful enough so looking to change this to a Manrose MF100t inline extractor fan.

Now I originally spoke to 2 electricians to get quote and both said same thing in that they would only put a junction box in there to connect existing wiring to terminal box and new 3 core and earth wire from terminal box to loft. Our loft is a storage room where the new unit is already mounted to the wall and the flexible duct is already there for current one so quite easy to connect to new one. Access to floor boards is also not a problem either. One electrician told me you don't need a electrician to put junction boxes in to connect to existing to new one however I wanted to give this one a go.

Attached photos of the Hager J804 4 way terminal maintenance free box and also image of current existing wiring in current extractor fan. I have the 3 core and earth 1.5mm.

Looking at the current wiring in current fan, we have red, blue yellow and black wire.

The 3 core and earth cable have 4 wires - grey, black, brown and a bare wire without sleeve.

I have done minor repairs before to hedge cutters with broken wires but first time in doing anything with lighting / extractor fan.

Just wanted to check, looking at the terminal box we have 4 terminal blocks with each block have 2 ports (not sure why).

Would this work as follows:

N - blue existing wire (one end) , grey wire oppostite end

Not 100% sure but 2nd terminal block appears to be for earth - yellow existing wire (one end), bare wire with a yellow / green sleeve on other end

L1 - red existing wire one end , brown wire opposite end

L2 - I am unclear on this one. We have black wire currenting exisiting and on new 3 core and earth. Would these connect together?

Also does anyone know why 2 ports per terminal block?

Thanks.


Colin
 

Attachments

  • Current wiring extractor fan.jpg
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  • 4 way terminal box.jpg
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Thanks. Is the reason for advising using a electrician due to the complexity of the wiring? The two quotations that I got from electricians were on the basis they would only using junction box with existing wire and if replacing existing cable wires from ceiling light it will take 2 hours to do as it becomes a bigger job. If the yellow wire in not earth, then what is it?
 
Thanks. Is the reason for advising using a electrician due to the complexity of the wiring? The two quotations that I got from electricians were on the basis they would only using junction box with existing wire and if replacing existing cable wires from ceiling light it will take 2 hours to do as it becomes a bigger job. If the yellow wire in not earth, then what is it?
I assume and am rarely wrong ;) by your last question you intend to do the job yourself, you have had 2 electricians look at it and IMO either get one of them to do it or get a third quote. I can assure you the yellow wire is probably a switch wire, the red a feed and the blue a neutral, well possibly, but it is not an earth. Get a spark in colin, long term it will save you any grief.
 
The insulation also looks damaged on the yellow wire.
 
I presume that where you have mounted the new extractor renders the existing cable too short (hence the need for a junction box) which would be perfectly acceptable providing the existing cpc is maintained into the fan assembly (which of course will not used but should still have earth continuity within the cable) and confirmed during testing/certification.

You mention running a new cable to the light? which would indicate no isolator. I would recommend installing an isolator switch whilst upgrading the fan.

The junction box actually has 4 ports for cables 4xL1 4xL2 etc. This allows for various termination scenarios and not just a straight cable one in one out junction.
 
Does the existing cable have an earth wire in it?
I think it has been cut off just at where the outer sheath has been stripped back to (I think I see a hint of copper between the blue and yellow). That is not a good sign of past installation, and I would not be too surprised if the other end had been treated much the same. :(
 
I presume that where you have mounted the new extractor renders the existing cable too short (hence the need for a junction box) which would be perfectly acceptable providing the existing cpc is maintained into the fan assembly (which of course will not used but should still have earth continuity within the cable) and confirmed during testing/certification.

You mention running a new cable to the light? which would indicate no isolator. I would recommend installing an isolator switch whilst upgrading the fan.

The junction box actually has 4 ports for cables 4xL1 4xL2 etc. This allows for various termination scenarios and not just a straight cable one in one out junction.

Yes this is correct. Currently the cable runs from bathroom light ceiling to extractor fan. The new inline Manrose extractor fan is in the loft. So a new cable run required from existing cable feeding the current extractor fan to new fan in loft using 3 core and earth cable via a terminal box is what the electrician advised.

There no earth in the wires feeding into the ceiling light so not sure why the previous electrican took this out. Would there be a valid reason why this earth might be taken out? We have had no issues with it so far.

The hager 4 terminal box - the 3 core and earth has bare earth cable - as this won't be used it can be stripped and terminated in the 2nd port of L2 ? or left as is ?
 
There no earth in the wires feeding into the ceiling light
Are you sure and they haven't been perhaps cut short? Doesn't sound like you'll have integrity of the earth connection throughout, not just the bathroom light which depending upon light fitting (ie class 1) in a bathroom would give cause for concern!
 
Are you sure and they haven't been perhaps cut short? Doesn't sound like you'll have integrity of the earth connection throughout, not just the bathroom light which depending upon light fitting (ie class 1) in a bathroom would give cause for concern!

The reason the earth was removed is because the current fan and the new fan does not require earth. The current fan there is no earth terminal block on the fan which is why I guess he removed it. The new Manrose MF100T inline fan has no earth terminal connection either. In the instruction leaflet it says no earth required because the fan is class 2 insulated appliance.
 
The new Manrose MF100T inline fan has no earth terminal connection either. In the instruction leaflet it says no earth required because the fan is class 2 insulated appliance.
I'm familiar with many domestic extractor fans which are primarily class 2 (double insulated) and consequently are not required to be earthed. Often the earth conductor is sleeved and terminated in a terminal block/wago etc. within the fan enclosure.
That doesn't mean that the cable supplying it shouldn't have an earth conductor within it though and my point was that if the earth conductors had been removed from the light fitting (your post #11) you might not have earth continuity throughout the lighting circuit.
 

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