- Location
- Tennessee NEC:2017
- Occupation
- Semi-Retired Electrician
I had this problem a few years back. What I had to do was wire up one fan and program it's remote to it. Then I had to unwire it and wire up the 2nd fan and program it's remote to it. Then wire the 1st one back up. The remotes for each fan would then operate each fan independently to the fan they were programmed to.Did a major remodel a year or so ago. She bought two similar ceiling fans with light, one for master bed one for living room. By design there was no place for pull chains, motor was apparently a DC motor and lights were LED, so only one pair of AC input leads to run everything and everything controlled by on board components and a remote control. Of course both set the same from factory and if you try to change something in one room it makes same change in the other room as well. I read through instructions on how to pair to a specific remote, but never could successfully separate them. Since I didn't sell them the fans did not feel obligated to put too much effort into this. Don't know if they ever figured it out.
