shackdweller
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2016
- Messages
- 86
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I've got a question on ceiling fans suspended from the ceiling by down rods.
My shack has a very high cathedral ceiling, and I do not want to have to climb up a high step ladder and disconnect the wires to the motor from the electrical box in the ceiling, take off the down rod from the ceiling box, while still attatched to the motor, then attatch the new fan to the down rod, pulling the wires thru the down rod, then having to take the whole assembled rig back up on the ladder to the ceiling, and attatching it from the top of the down rod to the bell housing that fits onto the ceiling electrical box.
I asked a salesman at a chain store, if there were any ceiling fans where I could simply take off the fan motor from the bottom of the down rod, using a short step ladder, and make the connections with the motor wire extending from the down rod in the housing of the fan motor, instead at the top of the down rod.
The salesman, who claimed much experience with ceiling fans, said that yes, there were fans where the connections to the motor could be made that way, but he did not tell me the name of whatever type of fan that would be.
That was in 2010, and at that time, someone else gave me a new fan, and installed it the old way, putting the down rod on top of the motor, and climbing a very high step ladder and connecting the top of the down rod to the housing on the ceiling electrical box, and making the electrical connections to the motor at that point.
I don't need to replace my ceiling fan now, but am concerned about possibly having to do so in the future, and I would like to get a fan where the electrical connections to the motor could be made in the motor housing, at the bottom of the down rod and not at the top of the down rod at the ceiling electrical box.
I recently discussed this matter with a man of many years experience, and he said that fan motors of this type were not manufactured any more.
Or, that fans of the type I want were never manufactured in the first place.
So, who is correct about this matter?
Is it possible to get a ceiling fan of the type that I want, and if so, what is that type of fan called?
My shack has a very high cathedral ceiling, and I do not want to have to climb up a high step ladder and disconnect the wires to the motor from the electrical box in the ceiling, take off the down rod from the ceiling box, while still attatched to the motor, then attatch the new fan to the down rod, pulling the wires thru the down rod, then having to take the whole assembled rig back up on the ladder to the ceiling, and attatching it from the top of the down rod to the bell housing that fits onto the ceiling electrical box.
I asked a salesman at a chain store, if there were any ceiling fans where I could simply take off the fan motor from the bottom of the down rod, using a short step ladder, and make the connections with the motor wire extending from the down rod in the housing of the fan motor, instead at the top of the down rod.
The salesman, who claimed much experience with ceiling fans, said that yes, there were fans where the connections to the motor could be made that way, but he did not tell me the name of whatever type of fan that would be.
That was in 2010, and at that time, someone else gave me a new fan, and installed it the old way, putting the down rod on top of the motor, and climbing a very high step ladder and connecting the top of the down rod to the housing on the ceiling electrical box, and making the electrical connections to the motor at that point.
I don't need to replace my ceiling fan now, but am concerned about possibly having to do so in the future, and I would like to get a fan where the electrical connections to the motor could be made in the motor housing, at the bottom of the down rod and not at the top of the down rod at the ceiling electrical box.
I recently discussed this matter with a man of many years experience, and he said that fan motors of this type were not manufactured any more.
Or, that fans of the type I want were never manufactured in the first place.
So, who is correct about this matter?
Is it possible to get a ceiling fan of the type that I want, and if so, what is that type of fan called?