To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Bathroom fan oscillates when turned off

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
I installed a panasonic bathroom fan FV-LP002 about 14 years ago. I was getting ready to do some cleaning maintenance to it, when i noticed the fan spinning around Slowly, but not fast. I pulled a permit for this bathroom project…

at first i thought it was a convection from a/c vent…or power from led night light….i shut both off and it still spun around.

i went to the breaker and only then did it stop.

Can i fix this easily?

What could I have done wrong? All the other circuits in the bathroom work and outlets are wired correctly.

Any ideas? Thank you.
 

Attachments

  • 946660F3-3BC4-4345-9242-64F7C6B80833.jpeg
    946660F3-3BC4-4345-9242-64F7C6B80833.jpeg
    51.9 KB · Views: 53
  • 03E3E002-743B-438B-B271-813929DD3758.jpeg
    03E3E002-743B-438B-B271-813929DD3758.jpeg
    90.4 KB · Views: 54
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Duke74

Well-known member
Joined
May 15, 2021
Messages
249
Location
Pierceland
was the fan motor actually making noise? I am wondering if the wind outside was blowing accross your fan vent pipe and it drew air from your bathroom through the fan and spun it. It quiting when you shut the breaker off might just be a coincidence. Does it start spinning every time when the breaker is on?
 
OP
V

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
was the fan motor actually making noise? I am wondering if the wind outside was blowing accross your fan vent pipe and it drew air from your bathroom through the fan and spun it. It quiting when you shut the breaker off might just be a coincidence. Does it start spinning every time when the breaker is on?
Yeah, no coincidence. I thought of all Those variables already. The speed of rotation is a constant. I flip the breaker and it stops. It is not turning with any velocity, but it is a constant.

I thought of shooting a 15 sec. boring video of a bathroom fan turning but thought better of it.

thanks for responding.
 

Duke74

Well-known member
Joined
May 15, 2021
Messages
249
Location
Pierceland
Yeah, no coincidence. I thought of all Those variables already. The speed of rotation is a constant. I flip the breaker and it stops. It is not turning with any velocity, but it is a constant.

I thought of shooting a 15 sec. boring video of a bathroom fan turning but thought better of it.

thanks for responding.
you’re welcome. It could be your switch. Switches will fail from time to time. I would start with taking the fan switch out of the box and touch the wires together, see if it runs at full speed and it should stop
100% when the wires are apart.
 
OP
V

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
Power to the fan in the ceiling is connected with a clip. The fan itself is on a timer….the switch itself could be leaking Through, though it says it is off….I think I could replace that switch…. Sounds like a likely scenario.
 
OP
V

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
I had a similar issue that I reported on another post that involved an LED light and a lighted wall switch…with the LED light dimly lit after it was switched off….so, i see this timer switch also has tiny LED, but the voltage is slightly enough to turn this fan.1786F2FE-AAAA-48D6-99C7-D2D2E1CA6D78.jpeg
 
OP
V

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
Well the SOB still oscillates when it is suppose to be off. It cost me about $35-42 for a new switch. It aint the switch. Probably the most logical place to begin if I were Spock. It has probably spun around at low speed for years and I didn't notice it. I am getting too old for this kind of aggravation right. Lol
 

SALIV8

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 11, 2008
Messages
2,114
Location
chicago and s/w michigan
Does this fan have a control board?
does it have a remote?

ive had to remove the control board on one of mine that was acting up and just straight wire it to a switch.

id at least meter the wires to see the voltages when off.
 
OP
V

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
Does this fan have a control board?
does it have a remote?

ive had to remove the control board on one of mine that was acting up and just straight wire it to a switch.

id at least meter the wires to see the voltages when off.
There will be no rewiring on this voyage away from the galaxy. No remote.

This is Panasonic bathroom exhaust fan.

Pretty strong but very quiet. So quiet and strong that I but in a slightly larger one in the upstairs bathroom ( this is off when I turn it off).

I will write the panasonic division that makes these as a last resort.... Thanks everyone.
 

engineer2

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 13, 2009
Messages
11,814
Location
Chicago burbs
Panasonic fans of that era used potted electronics. They had issues with the potting material shrinking over time and stressing/damaging the electronic components. On mine it caused the lighting circuit to fail. They sent me a new part under warranty. Contact Panasonic for their advice.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
V

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
Panasonic fans of that era used potted electronics. They had issues with the potting material shrinking over time and stressing/damaging the electronic components. On mine it caused the lighting circuit to fail. They sent me a new part under warranty. Contact Panasonic for their advice.
I will. That era! hahaha. It was not all that far back. this one has a night light, exhaust and the bathroom light. The one upstairs I ran a separate 20A circuit for the heater, but also has the night light, fan and light.....wisper quiet...120 cfms? I fergit.
 

ripperd

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 2, 2014
Messages
2,048
Location
Twin Cities, MN
Well the SOB still oscillates when it is suppose to be off. It cost me about $35-42 for a new switch. It aint the switch. Probably the most logical place to begin if I were Spock. It has probably spun around at low speed for years and I didn't notice it. I am getting too old for this kind of aggravation right. Lol
Does your switch have a neutral?

If not, it is likely drawing a tiny amount of power through the fan motor to power itself. That's how any electronic timer/switch control works if it doesn't require a neutral.
 
OP
V

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
it doesn't have a neutral. 2 blacks and a ground.... The other panasonic fan upstairs has the same switch, wired the same and the motor doesnt turn....perhaps it needs a different threshold.... anyway....i dont care just concerned about a fire issue.
 

justsam

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 20, 2010
Messages
1,267
Location
Penngrove, California
I found this statement in a product description for your timer:

" Exhaust fan must meet 0.3-amp minimum load requirement to be compatible; substitute MA-T51MN (item #742099) if the exhaust fan load is minimum 0.05-amp."

As posted by ripperd, there is a small amount of current being drawn through the motor windings causing it to turn. The switch model mentioned above is actually for a 3 way, which you do not need, but what it does have is a neutral, which eliminates the path as described by ripperd. Now the question is, do you have a neutral in the box?

Why is it happening to one fan and not the other I suspect is just a threshold issue. We are talking small amounts of current here and one fan may have better bearings or less friction in some way, but I suspect both are drawing a small current through the windings.
 

Forgottonia

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 20, 2021
Messages
808
Location
edge of Forgottonia
Do you have a clamp-on ammeter? If you found out which wire is feeding current into the motor you could probably isolate the problem. (If you don't have an ammeter you could start pulling wires off to find out which one is the culprit.)
 

csp

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Messages
5,719
Location
Franktown, CO
I know you've already replaced the switch, but if it were mine I would still verify it isn't a switch issue, and not with another $42 type. Use a simple on/off switch just like the one that turns a light on and off. Those either have a connection or they don't, there is no leakage or electronics that could be part of the problem.
 

justsam

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 20, 2010
Messages
1,267
Location
Penngrove, California
I know you've already replaced the switch, but if it were mine I would still verify it isn't a switch issue, and not with another $42 type. Use a simple on/off switch just like the one that turns a light on and off. Those either have a connection or they don't, there is no leakage or electronics that could be part of the problem.
I guess in affect it is a "switch issue" since I believe it is due to the solid state switch that is being used in the design of the timer. If the timer used an electromechanical switch, such as relay, there would not be an issue, same as with just using a toggle switch as you mention.
 

Duke74

Well-known member
Joined
May 15, 2021
Messages
249
Location
Pierceland
Take the 2 blacks off your switch and touch them together. That way it will act like a normal toggle switch and you’ll know for sure if the switch is the problem.
 
OP
V

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
Do you have a clamp-on ammeter? If you found out which wire is feeding current into the motor you could probably isolate the problem. (If you don't have an ammeter you could start pulling wires off to find out which one is the culprit.)
Always wanted a clamp on ammeter, so I could learn how to use it.
 
OP
V

vdotmatrix

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
485
Location
Northern Virginia
I know you've already replaced the switch, but if it were mine I would still verify it isn't a switch issue, and not with another $42 type. Use a simple on/off switch just like the one that turns a light on and off. Those either have a connection or they don't, there is no leakage or electronics that could be part of the problem.
This sounds like a reasonable experiment!
 

justsam

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 20, 2010
Messages
1,267
Location
Penngrove, California
Do you have a clamp-on ammeter? If you found out which wire is feeding current into the motor you could probably isolate the problem. (If you don't have an ammeter you could start pulling wires off to find out which one is the culprit.)

Few clamp on ammeters available or used by the DYI person is going to be able to detect the few milliamps of current being drawn, even if you put multiple wire turns around the clamp. The current being drawn is the amount necessary to power the solid state timer since it must draw it's power through the load, in this case the fan motor winding, since his switch being used has no neutral.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom