Hi,
I'm involved in helping out with a bit of general refitting in a flat at the moment, and have a few questions regarding safety / correct wiring for what we're trying to achieve in the bathroom.
The general plan is that we want to replace an all-in-one striplight/shaving socket, which was wired into the lighting circuit, with a) a wall-mounted shaving socket and b) a lighting system powered by a transformer that would normally plug into the mains (not a wall-wart transformer, but wired onto a lead). We intend to install a pull-switch between the mains and the lighting.
The questions I have are mainly about the lighting wiring. So far we have:
- Mains wire coming out of the wall where the all-in-one unit was, with a 3-way wireblock on the end.
- The lighting supply with it's plug and in-line switch cut off, presenting a brown and a blue wire.
- A pull switch, with L1, L2, and COM-L connections.
- A spur of about 3ft of mains wire with which to connect the mains to the pull-switch.
Now, from a bit of web research, we've sussed out that the correct wiring should be:
Mains Neutral (black) <--(via wire block)--> Lights Neutral (blue)
Mains Live (red) <---> COM-L
Lights Live (brown) <--> L1 (or L2, apparently doesn't matter)
(Mains Earth <--> earth terminal)
ie., the switch should only connect the two live wires part of the circuit together; the two neutral wires don't go through the switch at all, but are just connected together inside the switch housing with a wire block.
Now the questions..
Is the wiring above correct?
There seems to be no earth involved here. The earth from the mains spur attaches to a metal stud in the pull-switch, which itself is isolated from anything even remotely earth-like. (Pull switch is attached to a wooden fitting on a high shelf) Is this ok?
Does anything about this setup sound in any way dangerous? It occurs to me that we're cutting the fuse part (the plug) off a normally fused device and wiring directly into the mains (albeit via a switch). Is this a bad thing? and if it needs to be fused how would this normally be achieved in this sort of situation?
Also I've heard that extending mains wiring can be dangerous in itself, putting extra load on the circuit etc. Since we're adding a spur to go to the pull switch and a spur later from the same wire block to a shaver socket about 3-4 ft away from the original wall point, does this count as extending the circuit too far?
And lastly, we're not dead-set on not hiring an electrician if it sounds like that should really be necessary. Thoughts?
Lot of questions I know, any advice is much appreciated!
Thanks,
-j0n
I'm involved in helping out with a bit of general refitting in a flat at the moment, and have a few questions regarding safety / correct wiring for what we're trying to achieve in the bathroom.
The general plan is that we want to replace an all-in-one striplight/shaving socket, which was wired into the lighting circuit, with a) a wall-mounted shaving socket and b) a lighting system powered by a transformer that would normally plug into the mains (not a wall-wart transformer, but wired onto a lead). We intend to install a pull-switch between the mains and the lighting.
The questions I have are mainly about the lighting wiring. So far we have:
- Mains wire coming out of the wall where the all-in-one unit was, with a 3-way wireblock on the end.
- The lighting supply with it's plug and in-line switch cut off, presenting a brown and a blue wire.
- A pull switch, with L1, L2, and COM-L connections.
- A spur of about 3ft of mains wire with which to connect the mains to the pull-switch.
Now, from a bit of web research, we've sussed out that the correct wiring should be:
Mains Neutral (black) <--(via wire block)--> Lights Neutral (blue)
Mains Live (red) <---> COM-L
Lights Live (brown) <--> L1 (or L2, apparently doesn't matter)
(Mains Earth <--> earth terminal)
ie., the switch should only connect the two live wires part of the circuit together; the two neutral wires don't go through the switch at all, but are just connected together inside the switch housing with a wire block.
Now the questions..
Is the wiring above correct?
There seems to be no earth involved here. The earth from the mains spur attaches to a metal stud in the pull-switch, which itself is isolated from anything even remotely earth-like. (Pull switch is attached to a wooden fitting on a high shelf) Is this ok?
Does anything about this setup sound in any way dangerous? It occurs to me that we're cutting the fuse part (the plug) off a normally fused device and wiring directly into the mains (albeit via a switch). Is this a bad thing? and if it needs to be fused how would this normally be achieved in this sort of situation?
Also I've heard that extending mains wiring can be dangerous in itself, putting extra load on the circuit etc. Since we're adding a spur to go to the pull switch and a spur later from the same wire block to a shaver socket about 3-4 ft away from the original wall point, does this count as extending the circuit too far?
And lastly, we're not dead-set on not hiring an electrician if it sounds like that should really be necessary. Thoughts?
Lot of questions I know, any advice is much appreciated!
Thanks,
-j0n