





🌬️ Whisper-quiet control for the savvy home manager
The Panasonic FV-VS15VK1 Whisper Select Multi-Speed Module offers precise airflow control with adjustable CFM settings and a customizable delay timer. Designed for easy plug-and-play installation within the WhisperGreen Select system, it ensures energy-efficient, ASHRAE 62.2-compliant continuous ventilation. Its compact, durable design fits discreetly into your home’s climate control setup, delivering quiet, reliable performance.

















| ASIN | B00JALSFN4 |
| Color Name | Green |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars (233) |
| Date First Available | 18 June 2014 |
| Item Weight | 41 g |
| Item model number | FV-VS15VK1 |
| Material Type | Plastic |
| Percussion Diameter | 10 Inches |
| Size | 1.50 x 1.75 x 2.50 inches |
S**B
Make sure you put the cover on the fan after you've installed this and want to check the sensitivity, otherwise the light from the night light may be too bright and cause the sensor to turn the light off, so the light blinks constantly when the room light is off.
E**E
Works fine for me. Contrary to some of the other things I’ve read here, here’s my two cents. Zero means zero. If your fan is wired through the blue signal wires at the wall switch then with the “CFM” switch set to “0”, the fan will turn off and on with the wall switch or use any of the other “CFM” settings for the amount of air you need for the continuous run. Next, the “Time” switch determines how long fan runs after you turn off switch. If “CFM” is set to “O” it turns right off. If “CFM” is set to anything else, after the “Time” setting expires fan returns to the continuous run setting. Okay, my intent was to explain this once and for all but having reread this I can see maybe I have muddled the water even more. Just keep fiddling with it, you’ll figure it out.
K**C
I bought the motion sensor & nite light options for my 6 WhisperCeiling fans for my house after getting tired of hearing a jet engine in my bathrooms for years( the replaced model was a Nutone..a cheap builder install) some noteworthy observations. 1 : Motion sensor module: FV-MSVK1 As mentioned previously depending on which model exhaust you buy …there may be two timers if you add the motion detector module.(built into the exhaust itself PLUS the Motion Sensor Module you added on). The motion detector timer ( has a fixed cut off time of 20 minutes. But, if you add the Multi-Speed w/Time Delay Module (FV-VS15VK1) there is a separate timer you can set the fan to stop after 0 to 60 minutes, and it overrides the motion detector setting. 2: NightGlow LED Light Module: FV-NLVK1 The dial only adjust the ambient light sensitivity to tell it when to turn on. It DOESNOT adjust the brightness or output of the light itself 3: Condensation Sensor : FV-CSVK1 When the condensation sensor is used in conjunction with Multi-Speed w/Time Delay Module (FV-VS15VK1) the fan kicks up to high speed when the sensor detects moisture depending on your CFM setting. If no other modules are install then fan will run when moisture is dectected & shut of automatically after 20 min later 4: Multi-Speed w/Time Delay Module (FV-VS15VK1) You can set the CFM to 0 (zero) & then the fan ONLY comes on if motion is detected OR set it at a continuous speed to NEVER turn off Fan runs continuously at pre-set level, elevates to maximum level when a wall switch turns on OR detects motion OR condensation
D**R
Great little LED light. Works perfectly. Recommend adding it to your fan.
3**R
I have a $19 digital weather station that measures humidity much more reliably than this $45 piece of junk--and the weather station measures indoor & outdoor temp, humidity, air pressure, plus tracks 24 hr highs and lows. All this switch needs to do is connect the circuit to turn the fan on at the humidity level you dial in, and then turn it off when the humidity falls below that level. And it completely fails at that task. The dial range runs from 30% to 80%, but not only is this a poor choice of humidity range, the sensor is incredibly inaccurate. The fan is always on if you set it even slightly below 80% (even though the reported humidity is under 30%--desert conditions). And most homes average around 50% humidity, so what good is any setting below 60%? It would be better if the range were 60% to 95% humidity--and even great if the sensor were able to measure within 10% of the actual humidity value! What does it do? Well, if you set it at the maximum humidity level (80%), the fan usually stays off if the humidity is below 50%. However, even at a 40% actual humidity level, if you walk into the room and simply sit and breath for about 30 seconds (the fan is in a small 7x7x8 bathroom), the fan turns on. If you then leave the room, the fan stays on for the next several hours until it randomly shuts off (even with the fan delay setting at 0). The fan will then turn on randomly with no one in the room and off again anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours later--and all this while the actual humidity level in that bathroom is under 50%. The only part of this sensor that does work is if it just happens to be off and you take a shower, the fan does turn on within a minute of starting the shower--at less than the 80% humidity that it is dialed to. Unfortunately, it won't shut off again for several hours after the humidity in the room drops below 50%. I have checked the sensor device, and there are no moisture drops in the sensor in that prevent it from shutting off, it just appears to be a poor sensor chip for this particular purpose. So, we haven't returned it for exactly one reason: it turns the fan on when you're in the shower and forgot to turn it on yourself before getting in (a common occurrence in our household). At least it is preventing the walls from dripping with moisture. I have to go around and turn the fans off manually after they've been running, but at least I can hear the fan and do something about it rather than the other option of having water running down the walls from condensation. The Panasonic fan that this sensor goes in is a very nice unit, and the idea of having a humidity sensor is a great idea. Unfortunately, this sensor is an expensive piece of junk. I would welcome Panasonic redesigning the sensor and sending me two free replacements. We have 4 of the fan units, two with the humidity sensors and both humidity sensors work exactly the same: very poorly.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
1 month ago