Fitting fluorescents
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Fitting fluorescents
I’m gonna replace a couple of loop-in ceiling rose lights with fluorescent tube lights in my kitchen. Do you have any tips or is there anything to watch out for? Presumably I will need to just join the loop-in live/neutrals/earths in terminal block and have a piece of 1.5mm T+cpc from the block to the fitting? I have not bought the fittings yet. Any advice gratefully received. Thanks.
- ultimatehandyman
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I don't think that terminal blocks satisfy the electrical regs and so you are better off with a chockblock-
You can then feed this through the hole in the ceiling and then wire the other end to the terminal block in the flourescent fitting.
Terminal blocks are fine as long as they are enclosed and can be accessed.
You can then feed this through the hole in the ceiling and then wire the other end to the terminal block in the flourescent fitting.
Terminal blocks are fine as long as they are enclosed and can be accessed.
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- sparkydude
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better still make sure you just mount the fluorescent light over the old rose position and use connector blocks inside the fitting to extend the cables, that way all cables are easily identifyable and can be seen with the cover off. no hidden junction boxes above lights to catch us sparks out
Nick
Nick
If it isnt broke dont bloody touch it until it bloody well is and if it is broke then make drawing of the connections before you remove the broken one and replace with a new one LoL
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..ok thanks. The choc box idea doesn't present a way to connect all incoming and out-going cables (That I can see). The connector blocks seem to be the easiest solution but some people say that they are not allowed. I suggest that I connect the loop-ins and switch-live in a connector block and the Neutrals in another, tape them up, and push them into the carcass of the fitting. Sound OK?
- ultimatehandyman
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If it's in the fitting then it is finexAlex wrote:..ok thanks. The choc box idea doesn't present a way to connect all incoming and out-going cables (That I can see). The connector blocks seem to be the easiest solution but some people say that they are not allowed. I suggest that I connect the loop-ins and switch-live in a connector block and the Neutrals in another, tape them up, and push them into the carcass of the fitting. Sound OK?
I't frowned upon when they are pushed into the ceiling void, although most people do this!