by ericmark »
Sat May 05, 2018 10:45 pm
You can get special lighting junction boxes, in real terms two types, those with screw connections which must be accessible, and those push in maintenance free connections.
The proper lighting junction box emulates the ceiling rose, it has switched line, permanent line, neutral and earth. The idea is where a ceiling rose is not used, then the special junction box allows a single cable to feed a lamp as many European lamps don't have a permanent line connection.
Often the junction box is located very close to the lamp so it can be accessed through the hole the lamp normally fits into. However thought must be given to fire rating of the lamp if a whole is made in the ceiling.
Lights are normally wired as a radial, that is a single wire from the consumer unit splits and loops to many lamps. The limit is the length of cable before either the earth loop impedance or the volt drop is exceeded.
for 1mm cable with a 6 amp supply it works out at 30 meters, however if we consider the load even distributed then you could double that to 60 meters. That is for volt drop.
For an electrician who has installed many circuits he has a good idea if sailing close to wind, or if loads of leeway, with the latter likely he will only test after fitting, only if he things close to limit will he actually work it out.
But the whole idea is following safe routes as laid out in regulations to keep cables as short as possible. Short cables means better ELI and volt drop.
Although only permitted 3% volt drop on lighting, in real terms modern LED lighting is not that critical, it was the old fluorescent which caused problems. So 95% of the tripping current within 0.4 seconds is normally good enough, so a B6 MCB will trip on the magnetic side between 3 and 5 times rating so 5 x 6 = 30 amp, so 230/30 = 7.66 x 95% = 7.28 ohms for the ELI, using a C6 then 5 to 10 times so half that so 3.64 ohms and D6 is 10 to 20 times so 1.82 ohms for the earth loop impedance.
All just simple maths, and ohms law.
For DIY the problem is a new circuit often needs notifying, and would also need RCD protection, there is no requirement to upgrade old installations, but all new must comply with new regulations which in the main needs RCD protection. Since all my house is already protected I tend to forget other peoples houses may need it adding.