The lamps ran in series.
If you're in England or Wales this is notifiable work.I purposely bought 105w trannies specifically to run 3 x 35w lamps from each.
All the previous L.Watt stuff I fitted were in 'Kit' form (105w tranny + 3 x lamps + single cable). The lamps ran in series.
I had planned to do similar. Eg: run 2 or 3 lots of 3 lamps in my kitchen ceiling. The insulation is 'glass' fibre.
They'll be useless.thanks BAS:
The kitchen is approx 4.8 x 1.8m. It originally had a 60w pendant.
I replaced that with a 4ft flouro when I moved in.
I was thinking that 6 or 9 x 35w would suffice.
You don't need fireguards, you need something to keep the isulation away, and in the kitchen and bathroom you need that something to be completely sealed against the top surface of the plasterboard to stop air getting into the loft. Intumescent hoods or Fireguard type lights won't do.The place is a bungalow - so the fireguard fitting is not a problem.
http://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Technical/Lighting/VoltageDrop.htmlWhat size cable from tranny to 3 x 35w lamps please ?
That should rule out any form of small diameter recessed lighting using incandescent lamps then...I am now doing a complete re-think. Whilst running costs are one of the primary concerns,,,,
Widen your search - consider other types of ceiling lights, and if you must have recessed ones go for much larger than 50mm/2".so is the cost of fittings,,,, and the 'modern' look of ceiling lights.
A watt is a watt. You get marginally brighter light from ELV ones, but not enough to allow you to get away with fewer of them.I have nothing against mains voltage as such - I just thought that low voltage would be cheaper to run.
Yup.BAS: Thanks for that as well. Never seen the 'caps' before. Are they suitable for mains powered fittings as well ?
Ideal, as you can easily seal them to the ceiling. Silicone I guess...The next job was to be bathroom,,,,,,, are these caps suitable for that as well ?
Don't know - lots - they don't spread well, and the light all goes downwards.Right:
If I go down the mains power route, how many d'you think i'll need for the kitchen ?
Same as any other lighting. I think you need to get a book or two on the fundamentals of domestic electrical installations...What is the wiring sequence for this method ?
CFLs are bigger (longer, still Ø50mm), but you can get LEDs with MR16 envelopes. I don't think you can get ELV CFLs though, with GU5.3 bases - they'll all be LV ones with GU10.What shape are the 9w Energy Saving Lamps/fittings (same as MR16's ?)
In Kitchens, as a rule of thumb, for ELV or mains down lights fitted with a 50watt wide beam lamp, somewhere between 850 - 1000mm centers is about right. This is based on a ceiling height of around 2500 and 400-500lux on the work top.If I go down the mains power route, how many d'you think i'll need for the kitchen ?
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