I'm hoping someone can help me out with the last bit of this as the trusty Readers Digest book has taken me so far and then abandoned me for the last step.
We've one lighting circuit on the landing which is controlled by three two-way switches, one at the foot of the stairs (which we'll call S1) one half way along the landing (S2) and and one at the far end of the landing (S3).
The power comes into the circuit at S3 where I have the incoming red and the outgoing yellow connected to L1, the incoming black and the outgoing blue connected to L2 and the outgoing red connected to Common.
The other end of the circuit at S1 I have a yellow connected to L1, a blue connected to L2 and the red connected to Common.
Both of these work as expected and turn the light on and off quite happily from both ends.
When we replaced the switch in the middle (S2) however, it originally had a strange design with 4 connectors rather than the more traditional three with only the yellow and blue cables hooked into the switch and the two red ones connected together with a spare bit of terminal block!
The new switch is the same as the other two and just has L1, L2 and Common.
So given that I'm clearly just connecting together two sets of red/blue/yellow cables, which go to which terminal? The RD book doesn't help and my attempts to work it out logically have thus far come to nothing, and I've been trying to avoid the temptation to do it by trial and error !
Any suggestions gratefully received.
Andy