Yes, I saw that, but that does not mean a bodge is good.
Fans do not prevent condensation.
Fans do not prevent condensation.
True. I think the greatest issue with what the OP is proposing might be that the fan may well just suck even more humid air ('steam') from his kitchen into the utility room.Yes, I saw that, but that does not mean a bodge is good. Fans do not prevent condensation.
The fan will never stop.I want the fan to come on with the humidity sensor and to stay on for whatever length of time, about 30 mins or whatever, with the timer.
So, a 3 core flex running into a standard plug should do it?
I guess I'll connect the lives at whichever end of the cable is most practical if it doesn't make any real difference.
Whether or not that is possible, depends upon the fan. I cannot find the 100 MTHK on the Vents website, so I suspect it may be discontinued, and I therefore cannot find any information about it.I want the fan to come on with the humidity sensor and to stay on for whatever length of time, about 30 mins or whatever, with the timer. ... So, a 3 core flex running into a standard plug should do it?
I cannot find the 100 MTHK on the Vents website
The fan equipped with a timer and humidity sensor is activated by the control voltage supplied to LT input or in case of exceeding
the preset humidity threshold value adjustable from ~60% to ~90%. After the control voltage is disconnected or as the humidity level
H drops below the set threshold the fan continues operating within the time period within 2 to 30 minutes according to the timer
settings. The turn-off delay time and the threshold humidity level are adjusted by turning the control knob of the respective
potentiometer T for timer and H for humidity sensor clockwise to increase and counter-clockwise to reduce the set value. To set the
maximum humidity level (90%) set the potentiometer control knob for H max position.
Thanks for finding that.There is a generic PDF for all of the M range which states...
Indeed - that's what most of us have been thinking/suggesting - so 3-core flex (2C + E, to a plug) would be OK for that.So don't connect the switched live at all, just the permanent live, and it ought to do what you want.
Indeed - that's what most of us have been thinking/suggesting
That's correct.Ok, now it's all making even more sense, I can ignore the switched live, as that would only be for it coming on with a bathroom light or separate switch as mentioned above. That makes it even easier.
Indeed. I have no personal experience, but have heard many reports of them being difficult to adjust and/or so unreliable/unpredictable as to be pretty useless.I've heard that humidistat fans can be a bit tricky with the setting of the humidistat requiring a bit of patience for some trial and error with readjusting.
As I've said, if you find that the humidistat can't be persuaded to turn the fan on when you want it on, then a switch (maybe just a 'momentary action' press switch) would, if switched on and then immediately off (which is what would happen with the 'momentary action' switch), the fan would then come on just for the set timed period. If, on the other hand, the fan was coming on (due to humidistat) when you didn't want it on, you would have to switch it off at the socket (into which it was plugged) - but you would then (a) have to be around to notice the problem and (b) remember to turn it back on!I can keep the switch method as a back up plan haha
It's only a utility room, and the OP intends a somewhat neater arrangement than you are suggesting ....Am I the only one here who thinks that an extractor fan powered by a flex dropping down the wall to a plug into a socket is a horrible, ugly, cheap, nasty, couldn't-care-less bodge?
In any event, it's essentially only a matter of aesthetics, and it's up to the OP to decide what is acceptable to him.Then I'll just run it up the corner of the wall in one of those plastic cord covers.
No you're not, but the proposal has the advantage that it'll be easy to undo when he realises it isn't going to work.Am I the only one here who thinks that an extractor fan powered by a flex dropping down the wall to a plug into a socket is a horrible, ugly, cheap, nasty, couldn't-care-less bodge?
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