carealtor Posted June 28, 2017 Posted June 28, 2017 I have a 3 gang box just outside the great room. The 3 switches are for the "main" lights (cans), ceiliing fan, and the small light under the ceiling fan. Should the switch for the "main" light be on the left (as in "reading left to right") or should it be the "main" light switch be the one closest to the room (which would put it on the right)? I would think the fan and fan light would be next to each other, which would rule out putting the "main" light switch in the middle. Curious how others resolve what order they decide to put the switches in a multiple gang situation.
oberkc Posted June 29, 2017 Posted June 29, 2017 Personally, I put room switches further away from door or entry, and switches controlling lights outside the room closer to the door or entry. Otherwise, I don't personally employ any particular method.
stusviews Posted June 29, 2017 Posted June 29, 2017 Based on my experience as an electrician (more than a decade), it's standard practice when installing multi-gang switches to place the switch controlling the light in the room you're in (the switch is in the room) or the room you're entering (the switch is outside the room) in closest to the door. An exception is an interior switch for an exterior light. In that situation, then exterior light switch is closest to the door. In your 3-gang situation, you'll have to decide which is the "main" light and place that closest to the door, the secondary light would be next and the fan switch furthest from the door. But, that's just my suggestion. In general, the least used switch is furthest away from the door and the most used is closest.
paulbates Posted June 29, 2017 Posted June 29, 2017 Also consider that dimmers lose a significant portion of their load capacity (200 watts) when ganging side by side. The middle switch loses 400 watts if all 3 are dimmers. From the manual under mounting "Single or multi-gang junction boxes. Derating of 200W for each immediately adjacent dimmer." http://cache-m2.smarthome.com/manuals/2477d-en-03-26-2015.pdf Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
larryllix Posted June 29, 2017 Posted June 29, 2017 I like to order my switches by the same geographic layout as the room, keeping in mind the derating factor. as per Paul, and the convenience of the most used switch, as per Stu. With the low powered LED bulbs these days the derating factor can be ignored, if you follow the LED green practices, but the "reaching over" the other switches in a dark room to get ANY light can be a PITA.
carealtor Posted July 1, 2017 Author Posted July 1, 2017 Thank you for the responses. There is no door, the switches are on hall wall just as you enter the great room. Facing the switches, the great room opens up just to the right. So it sounds like the proper order would be: fan, fan light, can lights (main). Thanks again.
stusviews Posted July 1, 2017 Posted July 1, 2017 By "door" an opening in the wall is implied. There does not need to be something that closes that opening. If the can lights (main) are closest to the opening, then I agree with your decision, most especially if the fan light is apt to be used more often than the fan
G W Posted July 1, 2017 Posted July 1, 2017 I put mine, used most to used least. Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk
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