The blue wire is the hot wire for the ceiling fan light fixture.
Ceiling fan light kit installation blue wire.
Black wire is for the fan.
Ceiling fan connection light wired to light switch fan on off with pull chain.
The fan s white motor wire connects with the white or neutral supply wire.
Without connecting the blue wire on your ceiling fan to a power source you will not be able to control your lights.
The additional wire supplies electricity to the ceiling fan light kit so you can run the fan and operate the lights independently.
In many cases the fan s copper or green insulated wire connects with the ground wire.
This is true of most hunter and harbor breeze ceiling fans found at your local home store.
The wire colors in a basic fan light kit are typically black blue white and green.
Each of these has a black hot wire and each should also have a white neutral wire and a bare ground wire although there may be only one common neutral and one common ground to serve both circuits.
Before you begin make sure all electrical circuit breakers related to the wiring are turned off.
Find the short green wire or the green ground screw on your ceiling fan hanging.
Blue wire is for the light if light is included with the fan.
After 30 minutes of teetering on a high ceiling to add a light kit that would not light i pulled the fan s ceiling cap and found that the idiots who installed the fan didn t take the extra what three seconds to connect the blue light s hot wire to the black incoming line.
Green wire is for the ground.
Red wire is sometimes included and acts as a conductor to carry power to the light kit.
Disassemble the light kit from the ceiling fan by removing the two light kit screws.
A ceiling fan with a light fixture usually has two separate circuits one for the fan and one for the lights.
The fan s black motor wire connects with the black supply wire.
White wire is neutral.
The ceiling fan motor does not have a ground wire.
Install dummy terminal to end of each of the two wires in the switch housing.
The white wire is the neutral for the fixture and the green is the ground.
The black wire is usually reserved for fan power only and does not extend over to your light kit.
Disconnect the blue wire and the white wire connecting the light kit and the switch housing.
The black wire is usually the hot for the fan and the blue wire is the hot for the light.
Tuck the remaining wires into the switch housing.
The blue wire on a ceiling fan is to control the power running to the light kit.