There's no guarantee since it's not mine to take but I hope so. I can only get the lights if my great-aunt sticks around long enough for me to get my own place, since there's no way my mom's letting me bring an 8ft fixture or a 50 pound massive T17 fixture into the house. If she decides to downsize into an appartment, I won't have any place to put the lights. I don't expect her to move out of the house though. It's a big house for one person, but it's long been paid off so she just pays the taxes on it and she's got a decent pension from working at the bank for years and years and she's only providing for her and her cat so she can afford the upkeep on the house. She's actually had a lot of work done to the house. She had the master bedroom balcony over the garage redone (since it was leaking water through the garage ceiling) and had some other stuff done. I changed out her outlets and her bathroom switch.
She got a new medicine cabinet for the bathroom and the old one had an outlet whereas the new one does not. There were no standalone outlets in the bathroom so I replaced the light switch with a duplex switch/receptacle. The switch controlls the light and the receptacle had 24/7 power. The outlets and light fixtures are all on the same circuits in her house for some weird reason so it didn't make much of a difference anyway. It's the perfect place for a nightlight too since it's right at the light switch.
In case you were wondering, I did end up throwing out all the old receptacles and wallplates and the switch I removed from the bathroom. Yes, they were vintage but the wallplates were mosty cracked and a lot of the receptacles were stressed too (a few fell apart when I took them out). The switch looked to be in good health but it wasn't a "snap" switch (though it had a round body, leading me to believe it was vintage) so it didn't appeal to me.
I know someone's 1970s mobile home that has a bathroom light with a built-in outlet. Problem is, it loses power when you turn the light off. So it's useless if you want a nightlight in the bathroom or to charge a shaver or something.
Hmm that's weird. i wired hers so that the outlet has 24/7 power and the switch only controls the ceiling light. The exhaust fan has it's own switch next to the shower.
Same. In my bathroom though, the fan is on a simple toggle switch in the same junction box as the light and the fixture is a light/fan combo. Here's is a separate fan and light and the fan swith is a special non-standard switch.
Same here, in my bathrooms the fan and light are switched separately. In one of the bathrooms I have a timer installed to allow the fan to run for 1/2 an hour after.
I remember a motel I stayed in a long time ago had the switch wired to the light, fan and the GFCI outlet which was a PITA.
Yeah and I doubt it's a code thing since I've even seen hotel bathrooms where both are switched apart from each other, though I do believe the bathroom much have either a however big openable window or a fan of however many CFM...
She got a new medicine cabinet for the bathroom and the old one had an outlet whereas the new one does not. There were no standalone outlets in the bathroom so I replaced the light switch with a duplex switch/receptacle. The switch controlls the light and the receptacle had 24/7 power. The outlets and light fixtures are all on the same circuits in her house for some weird reason so it didn't make much of a difference anyway. It's the perfect place for a nightlight too since it's right at the light switch.
In case you were wondering, I did end up throwing out all the old receptacles and wallplates and the switch I removed from the bathroom. Yes, they were vintage but the wallplates were mosty cracked and a lot of the receptacles were stressed too (a few fell apart when I took them out). The switch looked to be in good health but it wasn't a "snap" switch (though it had a round body, leading me to believe it was vintage) so it didn't appeal to me.
I remember a motel I stayed in a long time ago had the switch wired to the light, fan and the GFCI outlet which was a PITA.