MANROSE mf150

Jadski

Member
Anyone got any know how on how to put a plug wire on MANROSE 150 I've opened it up and see L N LS where do I put possitive and negative wires
 

Jadski

Member
Cheers bud but it don't tell me how to wire a plug wire with plug on the end. I get the plug side it's wiring in the wire to fan there 3 screws LS N L is l live (brown ) and can I use netrel as negitive (blue
 

dbz

Well-Known Member
Cheers bud but it don't tell me how to wire a plug wire with plug on the end. I get the plug side it's wiring in the wire to fan there 3 screws LS N L is l live (brown ) and can I use netrel as negitive (blue
There is no negative in AC wiring and none of those are for ground. There might be a screw somewhere on the metal casing that you can run the ground to.

LS is Switched Live.

A lot of times these are used with switches/timers.

So your L - Live
N - Neutral
LS - Would be a switched or timed live leg
eg:
If you had a light switch on it, the light switch would be fed by a live cable, then it would have the live coming out of the switched side, then you would junction this together with a light and run that "switched Live" to the LS terminal on the fan. Same concept applies with a timer. It means that, that leg is not always live, that it is "switched".
 
Last edited:

dbz

Well-Known Member
Thanks for help guys aprieated so brown live blue N? Or ground it to a screw
You have two lives and a neutral...


SO

SWITCH/TIMER - LIVE---------------------------------------------LS
LIVE----------------------------------------------------------------L
Neutral------------------------------------------------------------N
Ground--------------------------------------------------------------Somehwere there is probably a screw on the metal that you can ground to.

Manufacturers like this have two types of fans, a switched live and a regular fan. Honestly you probably wanted the regular model but may have bought it because it said timer/switched fan. What that is for in applications like a bathroom exhaust fan or HVAC fan, where you have a second live signal coming from a switched source. So the LS is still a live wire, it is just meant to be for a switch. Their normal model doesn't have LS, just L/N.

It is meant for something like this
(Sorry just used paint real quick)

switchedlive.png

A lot of times you may have a light switch that ties off on the switched live and goes to a light at the same time, or a thermostat or timer that cuts the fan on and off using the switched live leg.
 

Jadski

Member
You have two lives and a neutral...


SO

SWITCH/TIMER - LIVE---------------------------------------------LS
LIVE----------------------------------------------------------------L
Neutral------------------------------------------------------------N
Ground--------------------------------------------------------------Somehwere there is probably a screw on the metal that you can ground to.

Manufacturers like this have two types of fans, a switched live and a regular fan. Honestly you probably wanted the regular model but may have bought it because it said timer/switched fan. What that is for in applications like a bathroom exhaust fan or HVAC fan, where you have a second live signal coming from a switched source. So the LS is still a live wire, it is just meant to be for a switch. Their normal model doesn't have LS, just L/N.

It is meant for something like this
(Sorry just used paint real quick)

View attachment 4769177

A lot of times you may have a light switch that ties off on the switched live and goes to a light at the same time, or a thermostat or timer that cuts the fan on and off using the switched live leg.
Thanks I've tried to put blue neutral in and brown live but when I plugged it in nothing happened it didn't Spin but the fuze in the plug didn't pop ithere litterly nothing happened. Do I need a switched live? Anit there no way run live and neutral wires and putting a plug on the end
 

Jadski

Member
What did in the end is bridged a wire from live to switch live then wired the plug In as standard live in live and neutral In neutral
 

Star Dog

Well-Known Member
What did in the end is bridged a wire from live to switch live then wired the plug In as standard live in live and neutral In neutral
If it was earthed wouldn't that make a potential shock hazard?
Live leaking into earth would make the fan live, no?
I know that live leaking through the earth would shut of the power but that's isn't gteed safe, no earth is, afaik its a safety circuit it doesn't play a part in working anything?
Who knows about leccy?
 

Star Dog

Well-Known Member
After a bit googling double insulated items don't require an earth, they're designed that the live can't touch the body.
Fwiw the casing can become live but it should be picked up by a circuit breaker.
Thank you Google!
 
Top