Installing Ceiling Fans
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
- An easy-to-install ceiling fan can make a real
difference in your home's climate-both cooling and
heating-at a far lower cost and operating expense than
almost any other item.
- The installation begins with choosing where the fan
should be located. In almost all homes, the fan is installed
in the center of the room, replacing a central light
fixture. This spot provides a smooth air flow to most of the
room.
- Since a fan draws about the same power as a ceiling
fixture, the electrical circuit shouldn't be overloaded. But
if your fan includes lights, be sure the circuit it's on has
enough extra capacity to handle the load. If not, you must
run a new circuit with a new circuit breaker from the house
main service panel or subpanel to the fan.
- If there is no central light fixture, you'll have to
create a place to hang the ceiling fan. Then, you'll need to
bring electrical power to it. You can tap into an existing
circuit to do this.
- Start your installation by turning off the power to the
light's circuit breaker or fuse. Only then should you remove
the light fixture.
- If there is no central light fixture, snap diagonal
chalk lines from opposite corners of the room to find its
center. Determine whether the lines cross exactly below a
ceiling joist. If they do, move aside just far enough
between joists to let you fasten the side of the fan's new
junction box directly to the joist.
- Cut a hole large enough for the junction box to be
slipped in. If it's next to the joist, drill holes in its
side and screw it to the joist.
- Installation between joists is OK, too. Fasten the box
to a 2x4 header nailed between the joists. Sometimes, you
can insert a 2x4 header through the junction box's hole,
nailing it to each joist. If not, you may need to open a
larger access hole. Then, patch the hole to close it again.
(see image above for a typical fan mounting where there's
access above the joists for header-nailing.)
- You may choose to use a patented fan support unit
designed to be inserted through the normal junction box hole
to save you from opening a hole in the ceiling (see image).
- Use only a metal junction box to support a ceiling
fan-never hang the fan from a plastic box. Depending on the
brand, style, and size of your ceiling fan-and your
electrical code - you may use a 4" or 3" octagonal junction
box. (Some local codes don't permit the use of 3" boxes.)
- The heaviest fan that should be supported by an outlet
box is 35 lbs.. If it weighs more, the building structure
must support it.
- Whatever you do, make sure the junction box is supported
well enough to hold at least 50 lbs. That's the weight of an
average ceiling fan. Also, your mounting must be able to
withstand vibration while the fan is running. Even a
well-balanced fan creates some vibration when it runs.
- You'll use a special beam mount when mounting a fan to a
beamed ceiling. Use one kind for a horizontal beam, another
for a pitched beam (see image). You may need an extender to
lower the fan to the proper level.
- Fan-mounting is particularly important because any
failure to make things secure could allow your fan to fall
from the ceiling.

ASSEMBLY
- Fan assembly varies from brand to brand. Be sure to
follow the specific instructions with the unit you buy.
Regardless of the manufacturer's instructions, if the fan
blades are less than a screwdriver's length away from the
ceiling, it may be best to install the blades before hanging
the fan.
- The hanger pipe is usually placed into its hole on top
of the motor. The wires are drawn up in the center. A set
screw is tightened securely to make sure the pipe stays in
place after it is threaded down.
- Some fans have a separate motor hub into which the
hanger pipe mounts. In this case, you'll place the actual
motor housing over the hub.
- Other fans have a two-piece decorative ceiling cover to
hide the hole in the ceiling. It is installed after the fan
has been hung on the ceiling (see image above).
- Tighten the set screw well.
- Other models use a hook, with the hanger bracket
designed to accept it (see image).
- To attach the fan blades, set the motor unit down where
it will be stable. Often, the styrene foam packing for the
motor housing makes an excellent stabilizer on your
worktable.
- Most fan blades have a two-pronged attachment, using
screws that come through holes in the blades and into the
flanges (see image). These need to be drawn up securely, but
not so tightly that the threads are damaged or the laminated
blade material is crushed. On many fans you'll find the
flanges, or prongs, also need to be mounted to the motor
housing. If this is the case, mount them before the flanges
are mounted to the blades themselves.
HEIGHT BENEATH BLADES
- Now, check the floor-to-ceiling height of the fan
blades. You can do this by measuring the floor-to-ceiling
distance and subtracting for the part of the fan that will
extend below the ceiling down to the lower blade surface. An
absolute minimum height of 7' is recommended (see image).
This may be reinforced by building codes in your area.
- If the floor-to-ceiling distance is too little, check
into a low-ceiling mount for your fan. With some models, the
fan blade height can be increased by as much as 10".
Remember, though, that you need at least 12" between the
ceiling and the tops of the fan blades for proper airflow
(see image). Having 18" is better if the space is available.
MOUNTING THE FAN TO THE BOX
- Install the hanger bracket on the box with screws and
lock washers. If no lock washers are supplied, get some-they
prevent fan vibration from loosening the screws over time.
- The hanger bracket may accept either a half-ball hanger
or a hook-type hanger, depending on which kind your fan
uses. Either way, the hanger is carefully slipped into the
bracket.
- Next, the unit is wired, and the ceiling cover is
slipped up to its full height and tightened in place.
- Be sure to connect the black house wires to the black
fan wires, and the white house wires to the white fan wires.
- The fan should be electrically grounded to both the
metal box and the fan (see image). The grounding wires will
be either green or bare copper. A green grounding pigtail
attached to the box by a bonding screw will make your work
easier. Wirenut the ground wires from the box, the fan and
the power supply together.
- If the fan wobbles when it runs, its blades may be
unbalanced. To correct this, try interchanging two adjacent
blades. If that doesn't work, take all the blades off and
weigh each one on a food or postal scale. If any is
underweight, tape a soft object such as a pencil eraser or
modeling clay to the top center of the blade, making its
weight the same as the others. Fan balancing kits with
detailed instructions are also available. Reinstall the
blades and the fan should run smoothly.
PROBLEM HANGING
- When nothing else works for fan mounting, use a piece of
good-looking hardwood plywood as a fan-mount. It should be
large enough to extend over two joists. The size may be 18"
x 18" or 26" x 26", or any variant that does the job.
- Use brass screws in pilot-drilled holes to attach the
plywood to the ceiling joists. The screw length will vary,
depending on the thickness of the plywood and plaster or
plasterboard ceiling below the joists. Use one screw every
6".
- The plywood will have an access hole of proper size cut
in its center, and will serve as the main mounting member
for the junction box above it.
- Finish the plywood with an outside corner molding,
mitered at the corners for a neat appearance (see image).
- Or, you can get a surface-mounting fixture box along
with a surface conduit wiring system that meets electrical
codes. This allows you to do the wiring installation on the
ceiling and wall, rather than behind it.
- You may wish to wire your new ceiling fan through a fan
speed control. This lets you set its operating speed
smoothly and easily.
SWAG KIT USE
- Swag kits are available if you wish to have a super-easy
installation and a degree of portability in a ceiling fan.
These replace the above-ceiling wiring job. In this case,
though, the hanger bracket is screwed directly into a
ceiling joist (see image).
- The swag kit is wired into the fan, and the fan
assembled as described earlier. Then slip it into the hanger
bracket.
- The chain and cord are hung from hooks carried across
the ceiling, toward a wall and down the wall, where the cord
plugs into a handy receptacle.
- A swag-mounted ceiling fan can be taken down in a few
minutes and moved to another location.
ELECTRICAL SAFETY
- Use extra care when working with electricity. Less
current than it takes to light a 60-watt bulb can be lethal.
- All wiring should conform to local electrical codes as
well as to the current National Electrical Code (NEC). You
can probably find a copy of the NEC at your local library.
- Never trust a light switch to render a fixture "dead,"
because sometimes the power enters at the fixture, even when
the switch is located in the circuit beyond it.
- Turn off the circuit you're working on by switching off
a circuit breaker or by unscrewing a fuse (the house main
switch should be off when handling fuses). Then padlock the
panel if you can.
- Make sure the circuit is truly "dead" before touching
any wires or terminals. Check with a high-voltage neon
tester. Test from the black wires to a grounded metal box or
other good ground, then to the white wires. Also test from
the white wires to a ground. Since there may be more than
one circuit inside an outlet box, before you take off a
cover, see that all of its circuits are off. Also, be sure
your tester is functioning by first trying it in a live
receptacle.
- Test your finished work with the power on using the neon
tester. Check black to white and black to a ground. It
should light. Test white to ground. It should not light.
- If you aren't knowledgeable about working around
electricity, call in a professional.
TOOL AND MATERIAL CHECKLIST
| Ceiling Fan |
Mounting Kit |
| Swag Kit |
Lock Washers |
| Low-Ceiling Mount |
Angled-Ceiling Mount |
| Patented Support Unit |
4" x 1-1/2" Octagon Electrical Box |
| Neon Test Light |
No. 2 Phillips Screwdriver |
| Claw Hammer |
3/16" Slotted Screwdriver |
| Speed Controller |
Pliers |
| Wallboard or Compass Saw |
Soft Cloth |
| Stud Locator |
Ladder |
| Electrician's Pliers |
Wire-Stripper |
| Cable-Ripper |
Surface-Wiring System |
| Cable, Switch/Outlet Box, Switch,
Box Connectors, Wirenuts, Switch Cover, Bonding Screw,
Staples |
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Check your state and local codes before starting any
project. Follow all safety precautions. Information in this
document has been furnished by the National Retail Hardware
Association (NRHA) and associated contributors. Every effort
has been made to ensure accuracy and safety. Neither NRHA, any
contributor nor the retailer can be held responsible for
damages or injuries resulting from the use of the information
in this
document. |