festivalmick
Member
Hi Guys, I wonder if anyone can help me?
I run a PAT Testing company and from time to time I Get asked to do electrical work which I sub out to a qualified spark 99% of the time. However if its just a case of changing a light fitting or a switch I tend to do this myself. I was asked this week to change a 6ft double florecsent fitting by a customer which I agreed to do but when I went to do it It turned out that the guy had purchased a Thorn Poppack emergency fitting (E3PPZXL270) and he wanted me to fit this so that if the lights went off he would have an emergency light. The problem is that he has 8 lights in total and they all run off of each other in a chain so there is no permanant live. I expained to him that I was not qualified to be able to put in a permanant live and felt that this was a specialist job etc etc. He then asked if I could just wire it as a normal light for him. I thought in theory if I just connected the switch live (Wire) to the switch live terminal this would work but it did not so I then connected the switch live (Wire) to the permanant live terminal thinking this would probably not work and I was right but I thought the green charging light might come on on the unit and it did not. In desperation I then bridged the switch live and permanant live on the unit and this time the green light did come on and when I turned the light switch off half of one of the tubes lit up ???
My question is, is there a way to wire this fitting and use it just as a normal fitting?
Also can anyone tell me just out of interest how these fittings are actually supposed to work when they are wired correctly using a permanant live? Ie does one tube remain on or do both remain on if they are used normally when switched on as a light and then under emergency conditions Ie when there is a power cut does one tube come on or do both tubes come on.
Thanks for reading
Cheers Mick
I run a PAT Testing company and from time to time I Get asked to do electrical work which I sub out to a qualified spark 99% of the time. However if its just a case of changing a light fitting or a switch I tend to do this myself. I was asked this week to change a 6ft double florecsent fitting by a customer which I agreed to do but when I went to do it It turned out that the guy had purchased a Thorn Poppack emergency fitting (E3PPZXL270) and he wanted me to fit this so that if the lights went off he would have an emergency light. The problem is that he has 8 lights in total and they all run off of each other in a chain so there is no permanant live. I expained to him that I was not qualified to be able to put in a permanant live and felt that this was a specialist job etc etc. He then asked if I could just wire it as a normal light for him. I thought in theory if I just connected the switch live (Wire) to the switch live terminal this would work but it did not so I then connected the switch live (Wire) to the permanant live terminal thinking this would probably not work and I was right but I thought the green charging light might come on on the unit and it did not. In desperation I then bridged the switch live and permanant live on the unit and this time the green light did come on and when I turned the light switch off half of one of the tubes lit up ???
My question is, is there a way to wire this fitting and use it just as a normal fitting?
Also can anyone tell me just out of interest how these fittings are actually supposed to work when they are wired correctly using a permanant live? Ie does one tube remain on or do both remain on if they are used normally when switched on as a light and then under emergency conditions Ie when there is a power cut does one tube come on or do both tubes come on.
Thanks for reading
Cheers Mick