Electrical – Ceiling fan and light on separate three way switches, code compliant

ceiling-fanelectricalswitch

I am in a new-to-me house built in the 1970s.
We are on the 2014 NEC.

I have two long living rooms, one with the ceiling fan improperly wired, and one without a fan at all.

I would like to have in each room one ceiling fan with the fan and light controls separate. This is a common request and easy to find plans for. What I would like to do in addition is to have three way switches for both the fan and light. Imagine a long room with the fan in the middle and at each end a two gang box with one switch for fan and one for the light. This is not easy to find plans for.

I have drawn up a simple plan as to how to do this like simple 3-way switch wiring but don't know if this is acceptable.

Most of the things I have read to this point state that this is not OK as when only the fan or only the light is in use, some current would be flowing through the neutral wires in each cable between the three way switches, which is not allowed.

I am wondering if this wiring setup is compliant with the 2014 NEC. If not, I ask why not, and what would be an appropriate way of wiring this.

The current source cable is at a wall switch box but could be moved to the ceiling fan box if necessary.

3way switch diagram

Best Answer

Good eye.

The only way to do this is conduit between switches

Unless you can find 14/5 with also ground.

The neutral and all four travelers need to run in the same cable or raceway (conduit). That's because the neutral is the return for all the travelers.

You can't parallel neutral as ThreePhaseEel discusses.

Or, keep them separate all the way

Your other option is separate them at the first switch, then, keep them separate after the second, with two 1x/2 cables going to the fan/light.

But since the neutrals can never rejoin, the two neutrals must be carried separately all the way to each device. so if the fan/light only has a common neutral wire, you cannot use this option.

Alternatives

You could use relays, as long as you keep your neutrals separate up to the relay coil. Or you could use 24V relays, either with combo relay-transformers, or by poaching 24V off your doorbell or furnace. Then your switch wiring could be 24V and use common thermostat wire.

You could use smart switches, so the power switching only happens at one switch, and the request from the other switch is handled by data rather than multiple travelers.