I'm replacing a broken bathroom light pull switch. It also starts the extractor fan, which must have a separate permanent live as it overruns some minutes after pulling the switch off again.
I was surprised to find a Double Pole isolator switch, the 16A sort you might use with a wall heater; not the simple single pole two contact type commonly used. A pair of live (red) wires enter and another red/live pair leave the isolator from each side. Tests suggest that one half of the double pole isolator (i.e. a Live In/Live Out) interrupts the live supply to lights; the other half of isolator (Neutral In/Neutral Out) interrupts the live supply to the extractor fan. Wires are double red & earth, not a common DIY cable so I assume professional work.
This seems an uncommon arrangement, where single pole simple switches are normal and wiring a fan to come on with lights is surely common. This appears the original built installation, not a bodge. Can anyone explain why this has been done, and whether a single pole switch could not pair the lives entering and then pair the lives leaving? More oddly, one of the live wires 'in' remains live even after the supplying FCU is switched off, only becoming safe when the lights MCB is tripped at the Fuse Box.
What has the electrician done, and why?
I was surprised to find a Double Pole isolator switch, the 16A sort you might use with a wall heater; not the simple single pole two contact type commonly used. A pair of live (red) wires enter and another red/live pair leave the isolator from each side. Tests suggest that one half of the double pole isolator (i.e. a Live In/Live Out) interrupts the live supply to lights; the other half of isolator (Neutral In/Neutral Out) interrupts the live supply to the extractor fan. Wires are double red & earth, not a common DIY cable so I assume professional work.
This seems an uncommon arrangement, where single pole simple switches are normal and wiring a fan to come on with lights is surely common. This appears the original built installation, not a bodge. Can anyone explain why this has been done, and whether a single pole switch could not pair the lives entering and then pair the lives leaving? More oddly, one of the live wires 'in' remains live even after the supplying FCU is switched off, only becoming safe when the lights MCB is tripped at the Fuse Box.
What has the electrician done, and why?


