You can wire a new ceiling fan with a remote to a wall switch or retrofit an older fan to accept an aftermarket remote kit.
Wiring a ceiling fan with remote and no wall switch.
The fan has forward and reverse with 6 speeds and there is no light kit although the fan is is wired such that the remote and remote receiver would operate if a light kit were added.
The wiring instructions for your new hunter fan differ slightly based on the type of wall switch and your fan s control system pull chain remote control etc.
Use this wiring when the power source originates at the wall box and you want to control both the fan and light with a single switch.
A remote can speed up or slow down the fan turn the fan on and off or turn the lights connected to the ceiling fan on and off.
To hardwire your ceiling fan you will need to connect the fan s power supply to the hard wiring in your ceiling.
A remote controlled ceiling fan bypasses one of the wall switches and allows for remote access to the ceiling fan s workings.
1 flip off the circuit breaker controlling the wall switch in the room.
Wiring ceiling fans can seem complicated but the task really just depends on the type of fan you are installing and how you want it to operate.
The fan is one hundred controlled through a hand held remote and the remote receiver.
A single wall switch controls the power to the fan and light together whereas a dual wall switch has two separate switches one for the fan and the other for the light.
There is no wall switch.
The black wire running to the ceiling box is connected to the other terminal on the switch.
This will enable the fan to function via a wall switch.
Look at the wires attached to the fan and the wires in your ceiling.
There is a remote inside the inner working of the fan which responds to a remote control.
Wiring on ceiling fan light combo with remote and independent single wall switch i bought the hunter avia model 59234 which came with remote to control the light and fan.
At the moment i have it.