Hi
I have dimmer switches in a living room and dining room.
In the living room there is a ceiling fan as well, however, the dining room chandelier is not yet up yet (haven't even bought it yet).
When I turn on the living room dimmer switch, it makes any radio I have on go to mostly all static. However, when I turn on the ceiling fan, a good portion of the static goes away. When I turn on the kitchen lights, it also lessens the interference (kitchen is located next to both the dining and kitchen rooms as it is an open concept floor-plan)
I was told confidently by one contractor that this is just a common thing with dimmer switches and there is nothing I can do about it, however, he often gives reasons for things he has little knowledge of to sound more competent than he is in every facet of construction (irritating because I sometimes fall for it and have to redo jobs).
I am thinking there is something wrong with a connection (a neutral or ground or something like that), but I don't know much about electrical other than remedial book work I did as an ME undergrad and some DIY repairs/installs. I was also thinking it might be due to the fact that I roughed in and nutted (but haven't yet installed to fixtures) wires for the chandelier.
Can someone please explain what the mechanism is that causes this interference exactly (I love theory) and how I might go about finding it and fixing it? Should I wait to diagnose it until after I have installed all of the lighting, or wouldn't that affect anything?
I guess I should also ask if this is a sign of something dangerous, just in case, since it involves electricity.
Thanks!
I have dimmer switches in a living room and dining room.
In the living room there is a ceiling fan as well, however, the dining room chandelier is not yet up yet (haven't even bought it yet).
When I turn on the living room dimmer switch, it makes any radio I have on go to mostly all static. However, when I turn on the ceiling fan, a good portion of the static goes away. When I turn on the kitchen lights, it also lessens the interference (kitchen is located next to both the dining and kitchen rooms as it is an open concept floor-plan)
I was told confidently by one contractor that this is just a common thing with dimmer switches and there is nothing I can do about it, however, he often gives reasons for things he has little knowledge of to sound more competent than he is in every facet of construction (irritating because I sometimes fall for it and have to redo jobs).
I am thinking there is something wrong with a connection (a neutral or ground or something like that), but I don't know much about electrical other than remedial book work I did as an ME undergrad and some DIY repairs/installs. I was also thinking it might be due to the fact that I roughed in and nutted (but haven't yet installed to fixtures) wires for the chandelier.
Can someone please explain what the mechanism is that causes this interference exactly (I love theory) and how I might go about finding it and fixing it? Should I wait to diagnose it until after I have installed all of the lighting, or wouldn't that affect anything?
I guess I should also ask if this is a sign of something dangerous, just in case, since it involves electricity.
Thanks!