Quote:
...when lights die, manually pressing switch does nothing.
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If pressing and releasing the switch manually several times doesn't change the situation, I'm not sure why we would home in solely on the switch - although it is certainly a good candidate. During the early minutes, when the lights are working, does releasing the switch turn the lights off?
Grasping at straws here - has the switch ever gotten seriously wet? For example, was the shower water turned on before the shower curtain was pulled around, allowing water to flow under the edge of the wall and soak into the body of the switch? That could have caused corrosion inside the switch, or even on the switch connection terminals. You can easily check the terminals for corrosion.
TM changed the list of things controlled by the switch at the time they went to LED lights in the rear ceiling fixtures. I don't know if your TM has the previous configuration or the new one, so it is a little hard to pin down. I remember that the CO detector was one of the controlled items - mine used to "squeek!" whenever the button was released. That is probably the same today, but you seem to indicate that the CO detector keeps working even when the lights have gone off.
The 30-minute thing suggests a thermal issue - something heats up and loses electrical contact. The switch is certainly a possibility, but there are others. For example, things get warm in the converter box. Did you actually pull out the fuse involved, and then replace it? Can you swap the fuse with another of the same amp-value from a different slot in the fuse block? If you have a tester of some kind, can you confirm that there is voltage at the input side of the fuse, even when the lights have turned off?
For a temporary fix, replacing the switch with a toggle switch isn't a bad idea. Of course you need to install it in such a way that it stays dry, and doesn't get crushed when the bathroom wall is raised. But that should be do-able.
You can certainly get a replacement switch from the factory. To replace it, you have to work from inside the rear compartment, but that is not a big deal. That doesn't help you immediately, of course.
Bill