But today I just can't wrap my head around what I've got...
Picture two bathrooms with overhead lights and seperate exhaust fans. Both bathrooms have two switches, one to control the light and one to control the fans. (The two switches are on a single gang device and share the double gang box with recepticles too.) Up until today, neither fan worked, so both were replaced. (Well, technically, at least one worked a bit... it would groan when the switch was on.)
After replacing one fan, I flipped the switch and the fan worked great. Note though that the light has to be on for the fan to run. Turning the light off shuts off the fan, regardless of the fan switch position.
I then moved on to the second fan. Once complete, I turned the fan switch on and nothing. Doesn't matter whether the light is on or off.
Below is a rough sketch of the way the two switches are currently wired. (I ommitted the ground wires for clarity.)
Note that both boxes contain a capped black wire. I found that if I touch the capped black wire for the non-working fan to the open terminal on the switch, the fan runs. (This is how I confirmed my new fan worked.)
After finding the one fan not working, that is when I went and pulled the cover off of the switch for the working fan. This is also when I discovered the switches were wired differently. Since someone in the past had replaced the switch for the non-working fan, I thought maybe they had just wired it up wrong. I temporarily rewired it like the working fan and it made no difference. (Well, that isn't totally true. I could use either switch to turn the light on, but the fan would never come on.)
The leads on my multi meter aren't long enough to check continuity and try and isolate all the wires. That is my next step, but I thought if I posted this up, someone might see something I'm missing.
