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#213957 09/13/14 01:11 PM
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,928
Likes: 34
G
Member
If you have a pergola with 1x4 slats spaced about an inch apart and they put a fan in there under a 2x4 foot fiberglass panel, is that area under the panel "damp"?
Quote
partially protected locations under canopies, marquees, roofed open porches, and like locations

The reason I ask is the electrician is having trouble finding a wet location fan box and the fans are "damp" too I think.
Of course he says that is always the way they do it.
Over at Mike Holt, the consensus is to use a round bell box and independently support the fan. That still does not address the fan itself.


Greg Fretwell
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gfretwell #213960 09/13/14 08:09 PM
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 7
J
New Member
I've always used a bell box and supported the fan with 3'' #14 screws.

gfretwell #213963 09/14/14 06:08 PM
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 5,445
Likes: 3
Cat Servant
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I think we just need to give up, and return to the simpler non-electrical days.

Or, maybe not ....

The customer isn't about to spend the thousands of dollars necessary to buy a 'proper' rain resistant fan. This follows what's all too common in the residential market- there often are no commercially made products that fit the intended application.

Even a Bell box is questionable, as it will be mounted 'upside down," and careful use of the included gasket will only make problems worse, by trapping water inside the box.

That's been the saving grace of so many of the homeowner hacks we've seen over the years; the materials used leak the water out as fast as Nature puts water in.

So .... what would I do? I mean, it's always easier to find fault than it is to make things work. (We won't get into how "it works, doesn't it" is one of the primary excuses used for outrageous hack jobs, at least not right now).

As much as I like enclosed (Bell) boxes, I don't have much faith in their threads supporting a fan. I want the mounting screws going into either good ol' steel, or substantial wood. Thus, I'd start by having the framer construct a stout 'box' above the fan, a box that will contain a suitable fan box. As a fringe benefit, this box will remove the electrical connections from the weather.

I'd leave t at that. Inspect it before the fan is mounted. Leave the customer to his own devices. Start worrying about the exact fan that will be used, and before long you'll be looking at light fixtures and kitchen appliances. Someday, someone will ask just what / who allows cars into the garage.

gfretwell #213965 09/14/14 11:20 PM
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,928
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G
Member
I think the canopy of the fan will cover the face of the Bell Box in a satisfactory manner so you will not be needing the gasket. Above the fan they have 2x10s so that is substantial wood.


Greg Fretwell

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