Matt_B
Well-Known Member
I would doubt that it is going anywhere back into the ring.
That light needs to be fused and also do not spur off of a spur, that's how fires start.
Fused how? It is fused at the fusebox?
I would doubt that it is going anywhere back into the ring.
That light needs to be fused and also do not spur off of a spur, that's how fires start.
That's what I said in post #9.
I would not suggest this to everybody, but I do honestly think that Matt should pay somebody who knows what they are doing.
Yay! You're still alive!
Fused how? It is fused at the fusebox?
Fused how?
It is fused at the fusebox?
Yup! The wiring goes on from the first light and round to another outside light and then into the wall to goodness knows where.
I just want an outside plug, something that seems prohibitively expensive! I can't understand why it can't handle a socket given that it is spurred from a socket anyway that was originally fitted? Is the issue the light? It hasn't worked for years anyway so I'm happy to drop that from the circuit.Read what I said above. You don't want to blow the whole circuit just because of a fault on a spur. Also the current in the spur should be limited (by the fuse) at a far lower level than the fuse at the box allows.
You really should not be attempting this, especially as the cable goes outside. The wiring you already have is faulty. Do you really want to make it worse?
As a spur (and remember it should be fused and isn't), it should go no further than that first light.
Is the cable that continues on actually attached? Is the spur and the continuation after the light twin and earth or just twin? Can you be sure that whatever is connected "goodness knows where" is properly attached or is it simply redundant wiring? If it is redundant, why is it there at all?
I just want an outside plug, something that seems prohibitively expensive! I can't understand why it can't handle a socket given that it is spurred from a socket anyway that was originally fitted? Is the issue the light? It hasn't worked for years anyway so I'm happy to drop that from the circuit.
I've been thinking of this the same as a simple battery circuit when obviously it isn't. It doesn't need to go "back" to a circuit at all does it, so the wire will terminate with the second light. I assumed it went onwards behind it. There is also the possibility that the switch box is a fused switch box, I'll check later.
Think I'll get my dad to have a look, he's an electrical engineer by trade and wired most of his house. I'll hold of for now cheers!
It isn't. A fused switch looks completely different with the fuse holder being capable of sliding out beside the switch.
View attachment 10768
Well as an immediate half fix for the existing problem, could I nip out and get a fused switch to replace that? 13A?
Good idea.
Well as an immediate half fix for the existing problem, could I nip out and get a fused switch to replace that? 13A?
It would certainly need to be 13 amp. But do you know what the rating of the cable is? It's possible that it's only twin lighting cable; possibly only capable of taking 5 amps. You would also need an earth and a heavier cable. We can't even guess what might be in the trunking.
That cable shouldn't be just clipped to the wall. The insulation will gradually be degraded by the effects of sunlight and tehrefore needs to be in trunkling or conduit.. I think that before you do anything, you need to know exactly where both of those cables go to. It may be that one is a supply and the other is simply a swicth cable. Is there definitely a connection between the double socket and the switch indoors?
Normally a cable going to a switch like that will be a simple "there and back" arrangement ... going from the feed side of the light, down to the switch and then back to the light fitting.
My advice would be to scrap that outside light and all the cabling that goes with it.
Run a fused spur from the double socket (assuming that the socket itself isn't a spur), out through the wall for your outside socket. Make sure that any external cable is contained in trunking or conduit. Use 2.5mm twin + earth
Put in a new circuit from the distribution board to deal with the outside light (this can be done with 1.5mm T+E), ideally using a lighting circuit rather than a ring main.
I hate trunking as it looks ugly, but if it's necessary then it's necessary.
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