Hi all, after a bit of advice here.
My builder's 'electrician' is in the process of adding lights to a new extension. I want to check what he's doing is ok (I don't quite trust him for various reasons!)
We have a radial serving about 24 GU10s in a large room (intention is to use 1W to 3W LEDs). Another radial serves about 12 GU10s (kitchen, again LEDs). Both these radials wire back to a grid switch box, each with a dimmer. The power to these is the end of the existing 1.5mm radial that serves the downstairs lights. This originates from a 6A MCB in the CU.
I can see that with all 32 lights on the current will still be very low with LED lamps. But if someone replaced them with 36x 50W halogens it'd be overloaded. Electrician says "it's all fine as the 6A MCB adequately protects the 1.5mm cable so all is good."
Is that correct? Has the old '10 lighting points maximum' for radials gone away now with people installing rows of low power lamps?
Thanks in advance!
My builder's 'electrician' is in the process of adding lights to a new extension. I want to check what he's doing is ok (I don't quite trust him for various reasons!)
We have a radial serving about 24 GU10s in a large room (intention is to use 1W to 3W LEDs). Another radial serves about 12 GU10s (kitchen, again LEDs). Both these radials wire back to a grid switch box, each with a dimmer. The power to these is the end of the existing 1.5mm radial that serves the downstairs lights. This originates from a 6A MCB in the CU.
I can see that with all 32 lights on the current will still be very low with LED lamps. But if someone replaced them with 36x 50W halogens it'd be overloaded. Electrician says "it's all fine as the 6A MCB adequately protects the 1.5mm cable so all is good."
Is that correct? Has the old '10 lighting points maximum' for radials gone away now with people installing rows of low power lamps?
Thanks in advance!