Couple weeks ago I noticed that one of the four LED uplights in the garden was flickering when turned on (its an ML Accessories / Knightsbridge unit). It would eventually stabilise and work as normal but as the unit is still under warranty I thought it would be worth replacing it.
After some basic safety checks to ensure the electricity to that circuit is off, I lifted the old LED light out and disconnected the cable from the back of the unit, leaving it in the hole.
The problem is that whoever installed the LED previously, didn't leave a very long run of cable at all. When I was lifting the old unit out, the cable was very taught with the LED barely out of the hole. As such, I can only really connect the new fitting onto the old wiring as it were.
What is best way to do this?
1. I could try to solder new to the old, then put silicone grease and shrink heat tubing around the L, N, E wires, but it would be a major hassle due to difficult access and not enough original cable length
2. My other thought was a 3a connector strip wrapped to death in isolation tape, connecting new and old?
3. Crimp and bullet connector connection
4. Other method?
After some basic safety checks to ensure the electricity to that circuit is off, I lifted the old LED light out and disconnected the cable from the back of the unit, leaving it in the hole.
The problem is that whoever installed the LED previously, didn't leave a very long run of cable at all. When I was lifting the old unit out, the cable was very taught with the LED barely out of the hole. As such, I can only really connect the new fitting onto the old wiring as it were.
What is best way to do this?
1. I could try to solder new to the old, then put silicone grease and shrink heat tubing around the L, N, E wires, but it would be a major hassle due to difficult access and not enough original cable length
2. My other thought was a 3a connector strip wrapped to death in isolation tape, connecting new and old?
3. Crimp and bullet connector connection
4. Other method?
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