Wow. That is the best bathroom fan ever. You can also sing in the shower with it. You can also use it for a relaxing day in the spa right in the comfort of your bathroom.
Already installed 2 in my bathrooms, mine were more tricky to install being we live in a manufactured home and there is no attic access nor enough height to get into the attic area anyway! Directions say you have to be able to get into the attic area to be able to install these. Which would be ideal if you have a attic space to get into! But you can install these from inside your bathrooms if your extremely careful making the ceiling hole just large enough to get this ceiling fan fixture to fit thru the hole on the ceiling. I had old fashioned ceiling fans that I removed, which were connected to a 3 inch ducking. Since there was no easy way to replace the 3 inch ducking to the new 4 inch ducking, I just used a 3” to 4” reducer connected directly to the new ceiling fan and connected other 3” end to the existing ducking. Fortunately you can cut the ceiling hole just big enough to slip this ceiling fan thru the hole into what would normally be your attic area. Then I had to cheat a bit and toe nail a couple screws thru the metal ceiling fan into some wood bracing from inside the bathrooms. As I mentioned already, if you cut your hole just big enough that you can tip the protruding vent connection on the ceiling fan thru your ceiling hole and then raise the other side of the ceiling fan into place. Your round ceiling fan cover will just cover up the larger hole in your ceiling needed to get the ceiling fan into place in your ceiling. Once again you must be very careful not to cut the hole in your ceiling any bigger then necessary to slip the ceiling fan assembly thru the ceiling hole, being the round ceiling fan cover just barely covers the larger hole. But if you did mess up and cut the hole too large, you could fill the extra area that would show past the round cover with some paintable silicone or some Sheetrock mud if it’s only a minor hole showing. But as long as your careful cutting your hole no bigger then necessary to slip the ceiling fan assembly into the ceiling where it needs to go. Your ceiling cover will hide the hole completely and there won’t be any need for having to fix any areas where the larger hole might show after installing your ceiling fan cover! Basically I made a square hole the proper size, then had to cut out a small area where the 4 “ ducking protrudes past the ceiling fan box. By angling the ceiling box with the ducking side going thru the ceiling first. You don’t need to cut out the ducking spot as much, better to cut small and try to fit the ceiling fan into place. If you can’t get it into place cut a little more where the ducking goes till the ceiling fan assembly will tip in and slide into place where you want it! Toe nailing some screws thru the metal ceiling fan assembly may require a punch to dent the metal so your drill bit won’t slip/slide from where your trying to drill your holes for screws to mount the ceiling fan assembly flush with the ceiling Sheetrock! I’m a retired contractor, so this wasn’t a big deal for me at all, but for others less experienced may find doing this a little scary to install these in this unconventional manner? But it’s honestly not hard to install this ceiling fan assembly as I did and no one will ever know you didn’t install this ceiling fan according to the regular directions the ceiling fan comes with!
I was thinking about getting this fan. I have access above the bathroom but I would have to starve myself for a month and perhaps cut off one of my arms. Anyway, how did you access the wiring and put the ducting together? Did you just drop down the power/neutral/ground through the hole and hook it up inside the bathroom and do the same with the ducting and then push everything back up and fasten the fan? As for the wiring, some people apparently have a difficult time figuring it out. It seems pretty simple to me, provide the hot, neutral and ground and connect these to the fan.....I'm probably missing something as things are never this easy.
@@jannelie32 I live in a manufactured home that has no attic to get into. So I installed mine from the bathroom. You have to do some creative installation doing it this way. For one since you can’t get in the attic to screw the fan to the ceiling supports you have to drill a couple holes on each side of the fan box on the inside so you can screw screws into the side of the wood supports to hold your fan box in place. Biggest trick is if your using the round fan like shown in this video you got to be careful when cutting your hole for the fan box or your hole Bell will end up too big for the fan cover to cover the corner of your hole! I already had a existing fan that I removed to install the new fan. The new fan was considerably bigger so I had to make my hole bigger. Where your fan box has the vent tube protruding past the fan box is the trick to making your hole just big enough that you can get that vent tube thru your hole and the rest of the box will slide right in. I also had to use a 4” to 3” reducer vent pipe since my original fan had 3 inch vent tube and the new fan box is a 4” vent . This of course does choke down the air flow some from having to use the 3” original vent tube. But it works as well if not a little better then the original air flow the existing fan put out. Wasn’t a huge concern for me. I had a just enough play in my existing vent tube that I could slightly pull it thru my hole and connect the reducer to the fan box and the vent tube to the reducer and slide the vent tube, reducer up into the hole first then tipping the back side up into the hole and screw the new fan box to the supports on each side so your box is flush with the ceiling. And put your round trim piece on and your done after turning your power back on if you disconnected the power? Long as you’re fan switch is off and no one turns it on while your working with your wiring there’s no power running to the wires to get shocked by. I’m a retired contractor by trade, so this may of been easier for me to figure it out how to Mickey Mouse this installation so it looked perfectly installed after the trim plate was put on. The hole size to get the box up into my ceiling just barely was covered with the finish round trim plate. So there’s no room for errors cutting your hole! If the corners of your hole do show a little past the finish trim plate you can use a little paintable silicone to fill in whatever shows past the finish trim plate. Or you can get some Sheetrock mud and fill it in too, whichever you prefer to do? If you don’t have a existing fan box with the vent tubing and electrical already ran in your ceiling. There’s really no good way to install any fan box into your ceiling without some how getting up above your ceiling into what would normally be the attic to run the electrical wiring and the vent tube unfortunately has to be done from above the ceiling! Long as you have a existing fan that’s connected properly, it can be removed and a new one installed from inside the bathroom itself. Not as it was intended to be installed, but no one will know you had to Mickey Mouse your fan box installation but you and I! 😉
I think if you open fan and access its blades they are in certain angle. if you bend angle little bit such that all 3 or 4 blades have sharper angles, the fan will make louder noise. BUT, you must make sure that all blades angles are identical but careful measurements so that when they rotate they dont run imbalanced. Alternatovely, buy a new one and l;ets swap it for my 1901 bathroom fan. I am joking.
@@trueforum378 I did install it and it was quite easy and didn't need attic access because I reached in to attach to the joists. I just installed it up through the existing cut-out but wired it before hand. It's a great fan. I do have a question, however, how do you get the light color to change? Do I have to access this from my phone or computer?
Like all your videos, I enjoyed watching this one. One thing in particular I noticed that concerned me was the way you had the wiring installed. The Romex cable should go through a stain relief that you need to put in the hole in the sheet metal junction box first. They are super cheap, but never come with the fixtures. They protect the wires from abrasion, especially since the fan will be vibrating when running. Then you make the connections to the fixture wiring, and close the junction box up after you are finished to protect the exposed wiring.
We put in a square one by Netwerks. It was the first time we had a fan in the bathroom. I had to rewire the junction box and add another wall switch. They had the previous overhead light directly in the junction box and the vanity light/w a plug in on the same switch as the overhead light.
I'm a believer in loud bathroom fans, to disguise any unavoidable noises you may create while in there. I also like installing a timed switch so you/your kids don't forget and leave the fan running for hours. I don't have usable access to my attic so or fan is not installed completely, need to cut an attic access in the hallway. You'd be surprised how few people actually vent their bath fans to the outside. Local hardware had all the employees dumbfounded that I want okay with just venting to the attic. I embed up buyback a vent to go in the soffit, think it'll be okay? I need to buy insulated tubing as well. Great video SSLFD!
lol, you can just play loud music on the speaker instead:) So, yeah, if you are venting in the attic you can end up with some pretty bad moisture issues and mold so you want to make sure that is working right. Soffit vent would work just fine. There are also fans that you can get where you don't have to have access to the attic. Let me know if you need a hand!
Random comment since I'm watching an ad right now. But yeah just something random here so youtube sees the interaction lol but mostly God Bless and keep up the amazing job with the videos!!! Haven't watched it yet but always enjoy your videos.
Getting ready to do this myself. Just a basic fan for us though. Waiting for it to cool down, still in the 90’s in Kansas today. That attic is unbearable with those temps.
Wow I love that light fixture and fan, my bathroom does not have one. I am going to check out how hard it would be to install one in mine. Thanks for the how to video, Jimmy
Nice job on the hack wiring. Next time maybe use a connector to properly land the wire in the fan assembly. People like you keep us electricians employed when someone’s house burns down
Accidentally clicked something else *face palm* so enjoy the extra long ad views lol also clicked on the ads mwuahahahahahahahaha Goiiissss if you wanna show support please watch the ads on your favorite youtube channels
great video...we just had one installed with a full bathroom remodel. we have 2 switched, so the fan is on one switch and the LED light and speaker are on the other switch. i have one question: is the LED light/speaker able to be put on a dimmer? thank you!
Nice video bro but you need to go back up on the roof. Where you put the tar on the top part of the flashing in the rain channel between the shingles you need to tar that whole channel because the water will hit the tar and disburse to the left and right underneath those shingle tabs and eventually you will have a problem. Other than that great job!
yeah man, I think I emptied the rest of the tube in that crack after I turned off the camera but I will check, I am just so glad that this thing works!
Mine is flickering and usually only half the unit works. When I push and mess with it the other half the lights flicker on and off. It drives me nuts. What do I do to fix it?
I have this same light but I read in the instructions that you have to bring a dedicated neutral to the switch but I seen you used the neutral in your switch box already is there a difference or is yours giving you any problems?
Great video as always! I may do the same, but I just have to replace mine. One thing I wanted to mention, and don't take this as a criticism, but I do believe you should have a GFCI since you have an outlet there. Maybe there's one upstream? Either way, it is needed for safety. Take care and God bless!
I picked up the smaller version that doesn't come with a switch. I'm a little confused because the light and fan have separate set of wires. I only had a light in that spot so there's only 1 black and 1 white wire that I have in that spot.
How do you program the blue night light? I can’t get it to stay on when holding down the button. The blue light turns white after a few seconds holding down the button
@@quickcmr2 I think I have an answer to your question if I understand your question. Do you mean you are trying to pair the switch to the fan? That is, you go through the pairing protocols but the blue light flashes and then you touch the Light button and rather than going to a blue light that remains on it instead switches to white? Is that what is going on? If that is what is happening, then I know how you can fix that. It happened to me and I figured out why. It works now fine.
@@quickcmr2 What I discovered why my switch would not pair with the fan unit was because of a connection in the fan unit (ceiling side in bathroom). When I connected the grill wires to the wires coming from the fan unit I accidentally bent one wire (of the three) so that it didn't go into the connector. Do you know which connector I mean? I had 2 of the 3 wires correctly inserted in the connector, but the 3rd wire was bent. I took my flat-tip screwdriver and carefully aligned all three thin wires and made sure they got connected correctly. I then was able to sync the switch to the fan unit. I hope that works for you.
The 1st set up is not pairing when it says switch on and of till it flashes and then press light to when it turns to a solid blue mines not doing that when am I doing wrong
I've finished the installation but struggling to get the round unit to the ceiling (at 11:30 yours is nice). The spring wires you're supposed to use as attachments to the fan box are too long by about 3/4". No matter how much I try to push the round unit up it leaves about an inch. The spring attachments don't work. Any thoughts on work arounds for this. Thanks
It was tricky but the wires actually push through a little in the clip as it slides up into place, keep working at it, it will pull it snug to the ceiling when it is right
@@SSLFamilyDad Ok I decided to just give it a big whack upward and it clicked into place flush to the ceiling and stayed snugly. I think I was just too gentle trying to push it. It took a good whack. I will needed to remove it all when I do drywall repair and painting, but it did pop in place. Thanks.
It actually has 3 sets of LEDs, White (13 Watts), Blue (11 watts) and Yellow (9 watts). They usually last like 50,000 hours but i don't recall this manufacturers actual rating for their lifetime. In any case, if one burns out yoiu still have the two others.
@@Guero619 yea I just moved into my uncles house for a bit and noticed the light/fan was also a speaker. I’ve been trying to connect with my 12 mini on iOS 14.7.1 but no luck no matter how many times i turn off bluetooth and restart
@@SSLFamilyDad there’s no way to reset it? It was working perfectly fine and then just stopped. (Don’t have the manual because it was already there when I moved in)
Seems like a D I Y Person Live there before.. lol Was just like the room with the Furnace in it... lol Funny Stuff... Thanks for your Time. Going to the Next Video... Trying to Catch Up on them !
Wow. That is the best bathroom fan ever. You can also sing in the shower with it. You can also use it for a relaxing day in the spa right in the comfort of your bathroom.
Already installed 2 in my bathrooms, mine were more tricky to install being we live in a manufactured home and there is no attic access nor enough height to get into the attic area anyway! Directions say you have to be able to get into the attic area to be able to install these. Which would be ideal if you have a attic space to get into! But you can install these from inside your bathrooms if your extremely careful making the ceiling hole just large enough to get this ceiling fan fixture to fit thru the hole on the ceiling. I had old fashioned ceiling fans that I removed, which were connected to a 3 inch ducking. Since there was no easy way to replace the 3 inch ducking to the new 4 inch ducking, I just used a 3” to 4” reducer connected directly to the new ceiling fan and connected other 3” end to the existing ducking. Fortunately you can cut the ceiling hole just big enough to slip this ceiling fan thru the hole into what would normally be your attic area. Then I had to cheat a bit and toe nail a couple screws thru the metal ceiling fan into some wood bracing from inside the bathrooms. As I mentioned already, if you cut your hole just big enough that you can tip the protruding vent connection on the ceiling fan thru your ceiling hole and then raise the other side of the ceiling fan into place. Your round ceiling fan cover will just cover up the larger hole in your ceiling needed to get the ceiling fan into place in your ceiling. Once again you must be very careful not to cut the hole in your ceiling any bigger then necessary to slip the ceiling fan assembly thru the ceiling hole, being the round ceiling fan cover just barely covers the larger hole. But if you did mess up and cut the hole too large, you could fill the extra area that would show past the round cover with some paintable silicone or some Sheetrock mud if it’s only a minor hole showing. But as long as your careful cutting your hole no bigger then necessary to slip the ceiling fan assembly into the ceiling where it needs to go. Your ceiling cover will hide the hole completely and there won’t be any need for having to fix any areas where the larger hole might show after installing your ceiling fan cover! Basically I made a square hole the proper size, then had to cut out a small area where the 4 “ ducking protrudes past the ceiling fan box. By angling the ceiling box with the ducking side going thru the ceiling first. You don’t need to cut out the ducking spot as much, better to cut small and try to fit the ceiling fan into place. If you can’t get it into place cut a little more where the ducking goes till the ceiling fan assembly will tip in and slide into place where you want it! Toe nailing some screws thru the metal ceiling fan assembly may require a punch to dent the metal so your drill bit won’t slip/slide from where your trying to drill your holes for screws to mount the ceiling fan assembly flush with the ceiling Sheetrock! I’m a retired contractor, so this wasn’t a big deal for me at all, but for others less experienced may find doing this a little scary to install these in this unconventional manner? But it’s honestly not hard to install this ceiling fan assembly as I did and no one will ever know you didn’t install this ceiling fan according to the regular directions the ceiling fan comes with!
I was just looking for a way to do this job in the inside didn't want to climb up in to the attic.Thank You!
I was thinking about getting this fan. I have access above the bathroom but I would have to starve myself for a month and perhaps cut off one of my arms. Anyway, how did you access the wiring and put the ducting together? Did you just drop down the power/neutral/ground through the hole and hook it up inside the bathroom and do the same with the ducting and then push everything back up and fasten the fan?
As for the wiring, some people apparently have a difficult time figuring it out. It seems pretty simple to me, provide the hot, neutral and ground and connect these to the fan.....I'm probably missing something as things are never this easy.
@@jannelie32 I live in a manufactured home that has no attic to get into. So I installed mine from the bathroom. You have to do some creative installation doing it this way. For one since you can’t get in the attic to screw the fan to the ceiling supports you have to drill a couple holes on each side of the fan box on the inside so you can screw screws into the side of the wood supports to hold your fan box in place. Biggest trick is if your using the round fan like shown in this video you got to be careful when cutting your hole for the fan box or your hole Bell will end up too big for the fan cover to cover the corner of your hole! I already had a existing fan that I removed to install the new fan. The new fan was considerably bigger so I had to make my hole bigger. Where your fan box has the vent tube protruding past the fan box is the trick to making your hole just big enough that you can get that vent tube thru your hole and the rest of the box will slide right in. I also had to use a 4” to 3” reducer vent pipe since my original fan had 3 inch vent tube and the new fan box is a 4” vent . This of course does choke down the air flow some from having to use the 3” original vent tube. But it works as well if not a little better then the original air flow the existing fan put out. Wasn’t a huge concern for me. I had a just enough play in my existing vent tube that I could slightly pull it thru my hole and connect the reducer to the fan box and the vent tube to the reducer and slide the vent tube, reducer up into the hole first then tipping the back side up into the hole and screw the new fan box to the supports on each side so your box is flush with the ceiling. And put your round trim piece on and your done after turning your power back on if you disconnected the power? Long as you’re fan switch is off and no one turns it on while your working with your wiring there’s no power running to the wires to get shocked by. I’m a retired contractor by trade, so this may of been easier for me to figure it out how to Mickey Mouse this installation so it looked perfectly installed after the trim plate was put on. The hole size to get the box up into my ceiling just barely was covered with the finish round trim plate. So there’s no room for errors cutting your hole! If the corners of your hole do show a little past the finish trim plate you can use a little paintable silicone to fill in whatever shows past the finish trim plate. Or you can get some Sheetrock mud and fill it in too, whichever you prefer to do? If you don’t have a existing fan box with the vent tubing and electrical already ran in your ceiling. There’s really no good way to install any fan box into your ceiling without some how getting up above your ceiling into what would normally be the attic to run the electrical wiring and the vent tube unfortunately has to be done from above the ceiling! Long as you have a existing fan that’s connected properly, it can be removed and a new one installed from inside the bathroom itself. Not as it was intended to be installed, but no one will know you had to Mickey Mouse your fan box installation but you and I! 😉
I think if you open fan and access its blades they are in certain angle. if you bend angle little bit such that all 3 or 4 blades have sharper angles, the fan will make louder noise. BUT, you must make sure that all blades angles are identical but careful measurements so that when they rotate they dont run imbalanced. Alternatovely, buy a new one and l;ets swap it for my 1901 bathroom fan. I am joking.
@@trueforum378 I did install it and it was quite easy and didn't need attic access because I reached in to attach to the joists. I just installed it up through the existing cut-out but wired it before hand. It's a great fan. I do have a question, however, how do you get the light color to change? Do I have to access this from my phone or computer?
Like all your videos, I enjoyed watching this one. One thing in particular I noticed that concerned me was the way you had the wiring installed. The Romex cable should go through a stain relief that you need to put in the hole in the sheet metal junction box first. They are super cheap, but never come with the fixtures. They protect the wires from abrasion, especially since the fan will be vibrating when running. Then you make the connections to the fixture wiring, and close the junction box up after you are finished to protect the exposed wiring.
Did you see his roof penetration...I don't think he's worried about fire.
We put in a square one by Netwerks.
It was the first time we had a fan in the bathroom. I had to rewire the junction box and add another wall switch.
They had the previous overhead light directly in the junction box and the vanity light/w a plug in on the same switch as the overhead light.
I'm a believer in loud bathroom fans, to disguise any unavoidable noises you may create while in there. I also like installing a timed switch so you/your kids don't forget and leave the fan running for hours. I don't have usable access to my attic so or fan is not installed completely, need to cut an attic access in the hallway. You'd be surprised how few people actually vent their bath fans to the outside. Local hardware had all the employees dumbfounded that I want okay with just venting to the attic. I embed up buyback a vent to go in the soffit, think it'll be okay? I need to buy insulated tubing as well. Great video SSLFD!
lol, you can just play loud music on the speaker instead:) So, yeah, if you are venting in the attic you can end up with some pretty bad moisture issues and mold so you want to make sure that is working right. Soffit vent would work just fine. There are also fans that you can get where you don't have to have access to the attic. Let me know if you need a hand!
I bought one of these. I love listening to music while showering.
How do you connect
Random comment since I'm watching an ad right now. But yeah just something random here so youtube sees the interaction lol but mostly God Bless and keep up the amazing job with the videos!!! Haven't watched it yet but always enjoy your videos.
I can’t even hear mine over the sound of the fan.. awesome.
I was laughing my but off when two peices of drywall came down and the second one had popcorn sealing.
Pretty sure you were like what the hell.
Lol, yup. Looks like they just dry walled right over it
Getting ready to do this myself. Just a basic fan for us though. Waiting for it to cool down, still in the 90’s in Kansas today. That attic is unbearable with those temps.
That was the biggest reason I waited on this also, once I had a cool cloudy day I got up there
Ooooof yeah Kansas heat is no joke lol. That's why I don't visit family during the summer times there lol.
The fan being a little loud is good, you hear it and reminds to shut it off when not needed.
Good point!
Wow I love that light fixture and fan, my bathroom does not have one. I am going to check out how hard it would be to install one in mine.
Thanks for the how to video,
Jimmy
Nice job on the hack wiring. Next time maybe use a connector to properly land the wire in the fan assembly. People like you keep us electricians employed when someone’s house burns down
Accidentally clicked something else *face palm* so enjoy the extra long ad views lol also clicked on the ads mwuahahahahahahahaha Goiiissss if you wanna show support please watch the ads on your favorite youtube channels
great video...we just had one installed with a full bathroom remodel. we have 2 switched, so the fan is on one switch and the LED light and speaker are on the other switch. i have one question: is the LED light/speaker able to be put on a dimmer? thank you!
Love your videos. Keep them coming.
Thank you for sharing. Great video as always. Now I know hot to install one in my bathroom. You got it done just in time before winter.
Nice video bro but you need to go back up on the roof. Where you put the tar on the top part of the flashing in the rain channel between the shingles you need to tar that whole channel because the water will hit the tar and disburse to the left and right underneath those shingle tabs and eventually you will have a problem. Other than that great job!
yeah man, I think I emptied the rest of the tube in that crack after I turned off the camera but I will check, I am just so glad that this thing works!
Good video and very detail..thanks
Thanks for the video.... just a suggestion, play some music so others might hear the speaker and can see if it's something they like.... Be well
Anyone know how to properly sync up the switch and light. Been having issues.
Thumbs up for the filter mask, lol.
lol, I did that just for you
I'm sure someone's already told you, but you sir should do Voiceovers or DJ work.
Showing how you wire the switch would of been helpful but the rest of the video was good.
do you need the switch to use the light? apparently men didn't come with a switch
Mine is flickering and usually only half the unit works. When I push and mess with it the other half the lights flicker on and off. It drives me nuts. What do I do to fix it?
You are trying to drive the OCD people crazier! Three sets of screws on switch are not lined up the same.
Ya, the slotted screws are supposed to be all vertical. Just a small detail, only the electricians would notice really.
I have this same light but I read in the instructions that you have to bring a dedicated neutral to the switch but I seen you used the neutral in your switch box already is there a difference or is yours giving you any problems?
Thank you for the video very helpful
You need a gfi outlet in your bathroom, the wire connect the fan needs to be inside the fan housing with a wire clamp so it doesn't move
Can you remove the speaker from the bathroom or do you need to be in the attic as I have the same one.
the speaker can be removed from the bathroom
We need a LOUD fan. Any idea who makes one?
Great video as always! I may do the same, but I just have to replace mine. One thing I wanted to mention, and don't take this as a criticism, but I do believe you should have a GFCI since you have an outlet there. Maybe there's one upstream? Either way, it is needed for safety. Take care and God bless!
yup, you are 100% correct there. There is actually a GFCI in the wall in another location that feeds that outlet so it still meets code.
@@SSLFamilyDad can you put a dimmer on this device and not the original switch
Help!! How do I change the led light color?
Does this light work on a 3 way switch
My bathroom has a single switch that turns on the fan and the vanity light. Can I install this without the provided switch?
No you need the provided switch but should be able to separate the switch for your vanity and then use the included switch for the fan
I picked up the smaller version that doesn't come with a switch. I'm a little confused because the light and fan have separate set of wires. I only had a light in that spot so there's only 1 black and 1 white wire that I have in that spot.
How do you program the blue night light? I can’t get it to stay on when holding down the button. The blue light turns white after a few seconds holding down the button
Did you ever get a reply to your question or did you resolve it on your own?
@@ds61821 the light is still not programmable.
@@quickcmr2 I think I have an answer to your question if I understand your question. Do you mean you are trying to pair the switch to the fan? That is, you go through the pairing protocols but the blue light flashes and then you touch the Light button and rather than going to a blue light that remains on it instead switches to white? Is that what is going on? If that is what is happening, then I know how you can fix that. It happened to me and I figured out why. It works now fine.
@@quickcmr2 What I discovered why my switch would not pair with the fan unit was because of a connection in the fan unit (ceiling side in bathroom). When I connected the grill wires to the wires coming from the fan unit I accidentally bent one wire (of the three) so that it didn't go into the connector. Do you know which connector I mean? I had 2 of the 3 wires correctly inserted in the connector, but the 3rd wire was bent. I took my flat-tip screwdriver and carefully aligned all three thin wires and made sure they got connected correctly. I then was able to sync the switch to the fan unit. I hope that works for you.
You sealed the bottom of the flashing? No place for the condensation to go.
how do you pair it?
This dude ain't no roofah
I only have 3 wires, will this work for me? Thanks
The 1st set up is not pairing when it says switch on and of till it flashes and then press light to when it turns to a solid blue mines not doing that when am I doing wrong
What happens if you don't have attic access
Can this be used in a dedicated shower? Will see moisture so I’m hesitate to upgrade
yes, this is for a bathroom with a shower and will help take out the moisture
Did you get that switch extra
Great video! My fan didn’t come with this switch though, where can I get one?
If you bought this fan it comes with the switch. I do not believe it is sold separately
My fan didn’t come with this switch either 😕
I've finished the installation but struggling to get the round unit to the ceiling (at 11:30 yours is nice). The spring wires you're supposed to use as attachments to the fan box are too long by about 3/4". No matter how much I try to push the round unit up it leaves about an inch. The spring attachments don't work. Any thoughts on work arounds for this. Thanks
It was tricky but the wires actually push through a little in the clip as it slides up into place, keep working at it, it will pull it snug to the ceiling when it is right
@@SSLFamilyDad Ok I decided to just give it a big whack upward and it clicked into place flush to the ceiling and stayed snugly. I think I was just too gentle trying to push it. It took a good whack. I will needed to remove it all when I do drywall repair and painting, but it did pop in place. Thanks.
I had a similar issue which I resolved by using a taller ladder to reach across into the opening not up and across
Thank you for sharing. Is that your disconnected heating duct laying there in the insulation?
Yeah I am in the process of removing all that at the same time
The classy way to watch SSL Family Dad while you poop. I dig it.
Is the Led light replaceable when it goes bad?
It actually has 3 sets of LEDs, White (13 Watts), Blue (11 watts) and Yellow (9 watts). They usually last like 50,000 hours but i don't recall this manufacturers actual rating for their lifetime. In any case, if one burns out yoiu still have the two others.
Can you connect more than one phone to this speaker ?
Mine says you can only connect oine device at a time. I believe they mean You have to unsync one device before adding another.
I'm not electrician and I'm not ragging on you in any way but why do you use wire nuts isn't that old shouldn't you be using the updated version .
Am I the only one who noticed two layers of drywall on the ceiling? One smooth and one popcorn!? It made me chuckle. :)
Yup, previous owner just dry walled over the popcorn
Cool but you should have played music from the speaker so we could check it out.
Can you play the speaker without the fan running?
Yes
Would this work with a switch loop wiring?
I put my fan in and I’ve got music playing but with a bunch of static
Damn all the work you had to put in just for this to have static. I would be heated
Can you talk on the phone with this speaker?
no
Anyone has issues with the Bluetooth going out? Fan works great but the Bluetooth no longer works.
You need to pair it
How the freak do you get the bluetooth speaker to work?
Is yours not working?
@@Guero619 yea I just moved into my uncles house for a bit and noticed the light/fan was also a speaker. I’ve been trying to connect with my 12 mini on iOS 14.7.1 but no luck no matter how many times i turn off bluetooth and restart
Make sure no other device in the house is already connected to it
@@SSLFamilyDad i checked everyones device in the household. It’s not a saved device on anyone’s phone. Any advice?
@@SSLFamilyDad can u have it set up so music plays automaticly when switch is turned on
What do I do if the speaker stops working?
Get a new one?
@@SSLFamilyDad there’s no way to reset it? It was working perfectly fine and then just stopped. (Don’t have the manual because it was already there when I moved in)
I just installed one and it will not sync .
Has anyone figured out how to link up to a Google speaker via Bluetooth?
one unanswered question indeed
youre really jim from the office arent you? lol you look alot like krasinski
airballed on how the clips perform/work.
Seems like a D I Y Person Live there before.. lol Was just like the room with the Furnace in it... lol Funny Stuff... Thanks for your Time. Going to the Next Video... Trying to Catch Up on them !
The wiring part always is missing
Luckily i have a drop ceiling in my bathroom so
At least shoe you're work. Dnt just assume
Especially if you're trying to make a video on How to......
What the he'll... you didn't show anything about wiring at the switch ... what the hell
That’s too much
Jc isn’t real
Ugly switch 🤦♂️
Hahhaha such a bad job installing the vent on the roof i bet anything there's gonna be a leak