Double insulated wall light - to fuse or not to fuse?

All electrical lighting questions in here please. Including outside lighting and light switch / dimmer questions.

Moderator: Moderators

Locked
Swoopy
Newly registered Member
Posts: 3
Joined: Mon Nov 26, 2007 8:21 pm
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Double insulated wall light - to fuse or not to fuse?

Post by Swoopy »

I've just redecorated a room that has a couple of twin & earth cables protruding from walls that were feeding a pair of switched metal wall lights. As an aside, the house doesn't have an earth circuit in the lighting so these cables terminate in a junction box in the loft with the earths happily connecting to themselves and nothing else :-) Anyhow, given that there's no earth circuit and i'm wanting to use the cables to provide a switched wall light for my son (it's now in his room) i'm looking at a double insulated light with a switch on it. Now, there are hardly any of those around these days and the ones i could find were suitable only for a bathroom - so what i've done is bought a switched, double insulated plastic light that plugs into a socket, with the intention of removing the flex and wiring it into to the live and neutral cables protruding from the wall. Obviously, there's a 3A plug on the flex at the moment - and the question is, after i remove the plug and flex, should I put a fuse in the circuit or isn't it necessary?

thanks for listening :hello2:
User avatar
Rich-Ando
Pro Tradesman
Posts: 7138
Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:24 pm
Location: Spondon, Derby
Has thanked: 135 times
Been thanked: 304 times

Post by Rich-Ando »

hi Swoopy, welcome to the forum. sorry we didn't reply, there are a few of us but sometimes we seem to have days where we are all at work ::b lol.

the 3amp fuse was in the plug purley to fuse it down from the sockets at a safe rating. the wiring to the actual light should be able to stand the same current as a normal lighting circuit light and should be more than fine connecting it directly to the lighting circuit with an inline fuse.
Swoopy
Newly registered Member
Posts: 3
Joined: Mon Nov 26, 2007 8:21 pm
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Post by Swoopy »

thanks for the reply mate - so i can't get away without a fuse at all, there's just not much room inside this small light fitting that's all.

cheers
User avatar
Rich-Ando
Pro Tradesman
Posts: 7138
Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:24 pm
Location: Spondon, Derby
Has thanked: 135 times
Been thanked: 304 times

Post by Rich-Ando »

Swoopy wrote:thanks for the reply mate - so i can't get away without a fuse at all, there's just not much room inside this small light fitting that's all.

cheers
my appologies, i obvioulsy didn't "proof read" my reply. having just read yours i felt confused until i re-read my reply and saw i had typed in "with" but i meant to type "without".
sorry for that. it will be fine on the lighting circuit without an additional inline fuse.
Swoopy
Newly registered Member
Posts: 3
Joined: Mon Nov 26, 2007 8:21 pm
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Post by Swoopy »

:grin: no worries - thanks for clarifying - i'll crack on with that now then. Many many thanks Rich-Ando.
Locked

Return to “Lighting”