Add a light to switch from a different circuit
I think here your concern is that you don't want change the performance of the circuit to which you add the light.
so you have to use a relay or a solid state relay to the circuit and a separate power supply to the light in compliance with all the safety rules.
Your question implies that you want to wire a new branch circuit controlled by a switch using the existing light fixture. DON'T DO IT! It is a code violation.
The existing light has a switch already. you cannot control another light with another switch when the first light is OFF.
There are safety reasons for not doing this. If you wire the new light from the hot side of the existing light, you can be shocked even if the new switch is OFF.
connect black to black wire, connect white to white, and green wire to bracket that came with light,and to bare copper wire that should already be in light junction box.
The load is essentially what consumes electrons. For example a load on a light circuit would be a bulb. Therefore, if you don't hook up a load you aren't doing anything. It is like turning on a light switch without a bulb. It may give you some minor exercise, but it doesn't do anything useful.
Yes, If you only hook up two wire it will work as a single pole
White is for neutral on the fan, black is power for the motor, and red is power for the light. If the power from the switch only has two wires (black and white), you would hook up white to white and hook black and red from the fan to the black wire from the wall switch. This means that you'll be powering the fan and light on the same switch and to change the fan and light separately you will have to pull on the chains or use a remote control.
Your 2 switches will have 3 terminals each. One will be copper colored and two black. You will require a 12-3 WG wire between the switches. The Travelers: The black terminals will be connected together one from switch a to switch b and the other from switch a to switch b, it does not matter which black terms you choose to go from switch a to b The brass terminals one will go to the light switch a and the other to a power source switch b.
If you have good access to the wiring this is relatively easy to do. Each of the 10 lights is connected to another in parallel in a "daisy chain" fashion. Light 1 is connected to the switch, light 2 is connected to light 1, light 3 is connected to light 2 and so forth. Let's say it is light 5 that you wish to switch separately. You can first install the new switch by either adding a new box or modifying old switch box. There are two gang switches that will fit the form factor of a single switch. TURN OFF THE POWER TO SWITCH BOX. Using the same supply input at original switch, add a new black wire to the wire nut for input to original switch and connect this to the input of new switch. Then run a new wire to light 5 and connect black wire to the output of new switch. Connect all the white wires together in switch box and separately connect all bare wires together in switch box. Now at light 5 undo the black and white wire coming from the fixture, and reconnect the wire nuts so that there is a direct connection between light 4 and light 6. Do the same for the ground if present (bare wire). You now have the fixture wires hanging free. Now connect the black wire from new switch to the fixture black wire and white to white and you are done.
to hook up the tach use the hot lead on the disributor and to any good ground wire and if there is a light hook it to the wire on you light switch
diagram to hook up switch leg
use a parallel circuit to make many lights light up at the same time as the switch is turned on.
Piggyback off the box for the existing light. Run a wire from the existing junction box to a new junction box (which is placed wherever you want the new fixture). Then, in the existing box, connect the wire coming from the switch, the wire for the existing fixture, and the wire for the new fixture together using wire nuts. Wire up the new fixture, and presto, you have two fixtures on a switch where there was only one before.
It's just a weatherpack terminal. Literally a plug and play device.
Yes, you will not be able to control both the fan and light from the wall switch.
Hey. Same as any battery. Connect the Negative terminal straight to the Negative on the light (if needed), Normally the outer rim of the globe. Connect the positive terminal to the switch, then from the other plug on the switch to the positive terminal to the light. Done.
don't know suck it up!!
Yes. The Nintendo Switch can be played on your TV.
id have to look to see why but what you can do is get new fans and hook it up to a toggle switch. when you hook the toggle switch up just flip the switch before it gets too hot
just nintendo switch to can hook it up to the tv and play with friends
you hook it in the trunk