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The 2 light bath fixture being considered for the bathroom renovation project features a modern design with two lights, suitable for illuminating the bathroom space. It has a sleek finish and is designed to be mounted on the wall. The specifications include dimensions of 18 inches in width and 8 inches in height, with a brushed nickel finish. The fixture is compatible with standard light bulbs and can provide ample lighting for the bathroom area.
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gallant
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okra
This is old school technology and hasn't been done for years in construction. What used to happen, the bathroom being a small room didn't have much ceiling area. Centrally locating the heat lamp fixture to a good position sometimes positioned the fixture in the radius of the in-swinging bathroom door. On many occasions the door was left under the heat lamp with the lamp on and the door caught fire from the build up of heat from the lamp. The electrical code made a revision to keep the fixture out of the arc radius of the door and this made for some strange locations of the fixture. The installing of heat lamp fixtures has just gone out of favour. It has been replaced with in floor heating in bathrooms.
skinny
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I do not know plumbing code but I will give you an electrical answer. If there are any other metal pipes connected to your fixture, in this case a lavatory, commode, shower or tub, it changes nothing. If there are no other metal pipes connected, you electrically isolate your fixture from a grounding source. This means that any electrical source that comes into contact with the fixture or the water it contains will not cause any current to flow. If this were to happen, this is actually a safer installation than being grounded. If a hair dryer or similar appliance gets dropped into the water, and if the fixture is truly isolated, there is no risk of electrocution. I WOULD NOT test this theory. But if the fixture is grounded it will facilitate the operation of the breaker that feeds a circuit that comes into contact with the fixture or the water in it. All this being true, all receptacle (outlet) circuits that feed a bathroom are required to be GFCI protected, which is a much safer protection device than the breaker.
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oddly
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