It was. It no longer is.It appears I have suffered some confusion. First UK voltage. As I said it has been nominally 240v for a long time,
Now 230V in Great Britain, too.230v in NI. Europe including the Irish Republic 220v.
It has in Great Britain.Harmonisation has come along and the nominal voltages have not changed,
The tolerances changed when the nominal voltage changed.only the tolerances have changed.
Not incorrectly. The nominal voltage is 230.However to please the Eurocrats it is now incorrectly referred to as 230v.
Presumably allowed.To base calculations on this incorrect figure is madness, no real engineer would do it. I've just measured the voltage at home and it 242v.
That cannot be done when designing, i.e. architects etc.LED lights and LED drivers are unlikely to have unity power factor. The correct formula is current = watts/volts x power factor or I=W/Vcos phase angle. The best way to know load current is to measure it.
That depends.Whether you want one driver per LED is up to you, but it does seem wasteful considering LEDs use so little power.
All lights out if the driver fails is irrevelvant in this case as the lights are not in the same place as the driver anyway.