they are NOT in the right holes.
Turn off the power, take all the wires out of the FCU, place it in good light where you can clearly see the identification moulded into the dark plastic.
If you cannot immediately spot your error, photograph it and we will explain.
Load = lamp
Supply = supply from socket
If they were wrong the lamp light would still work -but the neon on the switch would stay on all the time. Check your neutral connection and the lamp in the cupboard ?
DS
It is not safe because you have connected it wrong, which is why it does not work.
4 wires, 4 holes (plus the Earth).
In your photo I can't read the moulded identification, hence the request for a new photo.
I can only see one earth wire.
You had the conductors in the right terminals, although this is what looked badly done to me:top left says load/l1 on right is eart
middle left says supply/l
bottom left says load/n1
bottom right says supply/n (supply is written vertically)
It looks like twin & earth - I guess someone cut the earth back. It must be connected at the FCU, even if the light itself doesn't need it. But that would not stop it working.The supply has an earth. There are only 2 cables going to the lamp.
What does that mean?i've tried the neutral (from the supply - none on the load) into the connector on the light itself and also the housing too.
Those are the classic symptoms of either a flaky switch or a poor connection on the supply. The neon takes so little current that it doesn't cause a voltage drop across the high resistance of the poor connection, but as soon as you add a real load the voltage does drop and neither the load nor the neon work.Right latest saga - after taking the light switch off to photograph for one of the posts I put it back. Followed the instructions and same wires went in same holes. Still the same effect red lamp comes on when no bulb in but light and bulb don't work when there is one in.
Was it properly in place before you started all this?The wall socket wasn't fully screwed back into to place so when I went to do that there was a bang and the RCD tripped.
What did it make contact with?Looks like (from the colouring) that it was the earth(?) that went bang.
Please let us know what he finds.Any way I've removed the supply to the light switch and taped the wires up and am now awaiting an electrician.
Creating a poor connection?Can someone at least tell me what I was doing wrong?
How deep is the pattress for the switch?
You had the conductors in the right terminals, although this is what looked badly done to me:top left says load/l1 on right is eart
middle left says supply/l
bottom left says load/n1
bottom right says supply/n (supply is written vertically)
I know you said you tugged at it, but the wire should be clamped under the screw, not down the side.
There's an earth from supply going to FCU. No earth from load.It looks like twin & earth - I guess someone cut the earth back. It must be connected at the FCU, even if the light itself doesn't need it. But that would not stop it working.The supply has an earth. There are only 2 cables going to the lamp.
What does that mean?i've tried the neutral (from the supply - none on the load) into the connector on the light itself and also the housing too.
Those are the classic symptoms of either a flaky switch or a poor connection on the supply. The neon takes so little current that it doesn't cause a voltage drop across the high resistance of the poor connection, but as soon as you add a real load the voltage does drop and neither the load nor the neon work.Right latest saga - after taking the light switch off to photograph for one of the posts I put it back. Followed the instructions and same wires went in same holes. Still the same effect red lamp comes on when no bulb in but light and bulb don't work when there is one in.
Was it properly in place before you started all this?The wall socket wasn't fully screwed back into to place so when I went to do that there was a bang and the RCD tripped.
Dunno - happened whilst I was pushing the from of the socket in so I could tighten up screws. It could have only been the side of the 'inards'. It wasn't the screw as I'd got that in already from night before - was just tightening up.What did it make contact with?Looks like (from the colouring) that it was the earth(?) that went bang.
Please let us know what he finds.Any way I've removed the supply to the light switch and taped the wires up and am now awaiting an electrician.
Creating a poor connection?Can someone at least tell me what I was doing wrong?
Maybe it was nothing you did - maybe the socket being spurred from was already the source of the problem.
Maybe the previous owner wasn't being truthful about why he disconnected it.
As I said - we will be interested to learn the findings of your electrician.
they are NOT in the right holes.
Turn off the power, take all the wires out of the FCU, place it in good light where you can clearly see the identification moulded into the dark plastic.
If you cannot immediately spot your error, photograph it and we will explain.
If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.
Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.
Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local