I've inherited a light switch on a spur from the downstairs lighting ring which operates a garage fluorescent light and a 500W outside PIR security light from a switch in the kitchen by the door to the garage. (Can't access the wiring to separate them, but not a problem as the security light is used only for convenience to light the driveway). I thought it would be better to give this separate protection with a fused spur switch fitted with a 5A fuse - also with a neon (actually a LED) as a reminder, as my wife keeps leaving it on. Being on a spur there's only one 3-core cable coming in to the surface box. So I've connected the red wire to L input and the black wire to L load (and the earth of course). Lights work, but the neon doesn't come on. Presumably the neon would be powered by a potential difference between L load and N load.
Could I get the neon to work safely by connecting the unused N load to earth, thus providing a potential difference? The lighting circuits in the house are on an old consumer unit with pop-out fuses and no RCD. (All the power circuits are on a separate modern consumer unit.)
Could I get the neon to work safely by connecting the unused N load to earth, thus providing a potential difference? The lighting circuits in the house are on an old consumer unit with pop-out fuses and no RCD. (All the power circuits are on a separate modern consumer unit.)