androiduk2002
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I have looked closely (with out undoing cables) and I am sure its 1 3&E cable not a 2&E with a second single run in.
Had a phone call yesterday from "a friend". He was asking why non of his lights where working after replacing all the switches. "Well are the switches connected up correctly?"......."Well I just did it like the old ones was"....Which of corse where a different make.Some switches have all gangs aligned the same way up, others have them alternately up and down. I would say it's more common to have them the way the switch in your pic is. Some are changeable on site, some just throw springs and contacts everywhere when you take the screws off. The former are handy for making 2 gang intermediates.
Was told last week at college the final rose will be the one with 2 T&Es in
This is something I've found rather worrying for some time. It seems that we have courses being taught which just assume that circuits are wired a specific way, and barely mention the fact that other arrangements are common and quite acceptable. I've seen the same sort of assumptions in some DIY books.Its been worth while looking into it and discussing on here as its not something covered (yet) in college we have just been taught the modern method
Doesn't it just?! After a long time of wondering why 6243Y was red/yellow/blue rather than red/yellow/black, here is proof that the latter exists. I've certainly never seen it before. Cheap because of the "mistake" in production? A specially made batch?How strange.This ties in nicely with the other thread about 3 core and it not coming in sensible colours!
Also used this one quite a bit, particularly useful for rewires, saves finding a route up for a feed somewhere, just bring it up the landing switch with the 2 way drop. Less chasing.There are many different variations with 2+E and 3+E to give the required switching of lights while minimizing the length of cable runs. For example, physical sequence of devices in order of distance from power source:
Power -> Switch 1 -> Light 1 -> Light 2 -> Switch 2.