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Viper67857 t1_irz7dvb wrote

The green wire was probably at the very bottom of the switch, no? On a green ground screw? That is required for code purposes, to ground the frame of the switch for safety. It serves no purpose for functionality.

The white should be powering the fan while the black is incoming power (if it was originally wired correctly). If the black was taken loose, it was probably because something was fucked (maybe the switch, maybe the fan) and the old owners didn't feel like fixing it properly, though they should have at least capped the black with a wire-nut instead of leaving it dangling if it's a constant hot. I'd probe each wire with a multimeter to see wtf is actually going on before doing anything else. You should get no voltage between the white and green and 110-120 (or 220-240? I'm not sure what country you're in) between the black and each of the others.

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evolvedance OP t1_is08vuf wrote

>it was probably because something was fucked (maybe the switch, maybe the fan) and the old owners didn't feel like fixing it properly

That very well could have been the case - that old owner being my 80 year old dad. He may have attempted to disconnect the switch, not knowing how to do it properly when the fan went out. Pretty sure he didn't know it was a switch-loop either. He's a chief navy mechanic and is brilliant with automotive and almost anything mechanical, but, admittedly electric wasn't something he ever got to focus on. Which is part of the reason, I'm trying to learn a bit.

I'm in the U.S.

This is helpful though. I'm going to pick up a multimeter tomorrow to test. I had a voltage tester that only told me if there was any type of voltage.

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