Discuss Flashing LEDs when fan and lights off in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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Good afternoon everyone.
I have fitted an extractor fan in my bathroom with an overrun timer, to start when the bathroom led lights are turned on. I have wired the feed to the fan via an adjustable overrun timer and DP isolator with the SL for the fan timer coming from the light switch.

The issue is with lights and fan off the LEDs are flickering dimly - this stops when the DP switch is opened. I assume there is a small leakage to N from somewhere in the timer causing the sensitive LEDs to flicker, which when the DP switch is opened cannot occur hence the flicker stops.

I have bought and fitted a 47nF 100r capacitor and connected it to all possible combos in the timer - no change. The only thing that stops it is if I disconnect the SL from light switch yo timer - but obviously the fan wont run now.
I have spoken to a qualified sparky who's only suggestion was the capacity action as a snubbed - he doesn't know what to do now!

I am stumped and would appreciate any advice please.
 
If I understand correctly, rather than a fan with an integral run-on timer, you have a standard fan with a separate external timer unit connected in the wiring to the fan. Could you confirm it's done as the circuit below (with the neutral not switched) but with the timer connected after the switch to the three fan feeds?
If the run-on timer has any significant leakage from its live input to its switched live out, this could be the cause of the led's illuminating.
as above re snubber - but It may not be like an induced/ghost voltage that can be shunted, so that may not be the solution.

What is the model of the run-on timer for interest, because I'm thinking at the moment that may be the culprit?

IMG_0224.jpeg
 
If I understand correctly, rather than a fan with an integral run-on timer, you have a standard fan with a separate external timer unit connected in the wiring to the fan. Could you confirm it's done as the circuit below (with the neutral not switched) but with the timer connected after the switch to the three fan feeds?
If the run-on timer has any significant leakage from its live input to its switched live out, this could be the cause of the led's illuminating.
as above re snubber - but It may not be like an induced/ghost voltage that can be shunted, so that may not be the solution.

What is the model of the run-on timer for interest, because I'm thinking at the moment that may be the culprit?

View attachment 109798
Thank you for replying.

The timer is a Manrose 1351. The fan, buried in the ceiling! has a built in timer set to max (30mins), and i adjust the overrun time on the external timer. The supply to the fan isolator DP switch is last on the lighting radial. It then goes to the timer and the output from the 1351 timer to the fan. The 1351 timer needs a SL so I have taken a SL from the light switch to timer, to control the timer start function. Output from the timer then to fan. The fan needs a SL in its JB so i have looped the fan L to SL in the fan JB.
All functions correctly except the LEDs flicker dimly unless the DP switch is open.

I have two bathrooms with the same issue, all wired the same.

I tried to load a wiring diagram but it was 3.2Mb and it wouldn't accept it I'm afraid!

Thank you for helping.
 
All functions correctly except the LEDs flicker dimly unless the DP switch is open.
I think it's significant that the Manrose timer spec gives not only a maximum load, but also a minimum load of 15W!
I'm suspicious of leakage current coming out of the switched live terminal of the Manrose timer when the lights are off, causing the led flickering effect.
If a snubber across the bathroom led's doesn't fix it, I'm not sure what's next best.
You could fit a relay across the lights and use the n.o. contact to energise the Manrose SL input!
If the bathroom LED's are of an interchangeable type, eg GU10 holders, as a bodge you could put a single halogen bulb in one of them, which should stop the flickering of the rest!
Or use a double pole light switch with one pole for the Manrose SL and the other for the lights!
Or try a different overrun timer!

I tried to load a wiring diagram but it was 3.2Mb and it wouldn't accept it I'm afraid!

If using a tablet or PC you might try taking a screen shot, editing out anything spurious round the edges, and uploading that!
 
I have the same unit to control my shower fan, it switches two independent LED GU10's in the shower cubicle without any flickering, but then I did wire it in accordance with the wiring diagram in post 7 between the SL and N into the Manrose unit after the switch.
 
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