I want to fit a new ceiling light in my living room,the new light that I have bought is made of metal and so has a earth terminal on it. However there is no earthing on my lighting circuit. Can this light be fitted or should I change it for one without an earth.
Does this mean that I have to rewire the lighting circuit fully or can I run an earth from the rose that I want to use back to the board (and if so what size would this need to be).
I appresiate that a full rewire would be the best thing to do but lots cheaper just to earth the light that I want. Anyway thank you all for your advice so far.
Does this mean that I have to rewire the lighting circuit fully or can I run an earth from the rose that I want to use back to the board (and if so what size would this need to be).
I appresiate that a full rewire would be the best thing to do but lots cheaper just to earth the light that I want. Anyway thank you all for your advice so far.
but do you know what condition the wiring is in? it may have extremely low insulation resistance, your sockets may not be earthed. you probably wont have an RCD (altho quite a few houses dont)
It is permissible to earth just the offending light, but the condition of the cable in other ways needs to be considered. Is it cloth, rubber or PVC insulated?
Anything except PVC nowadays is suspect until passed by a 500V insulation test. Some early PVCs have a problem of 'green gunge' as the plasticiser leaches, and the copper is attacked.
Some 1970s copper shortage 2.5mm ring mains have a 1mm earth core that fails to discriminate against a 30A fuse under certain embarassing fault conditions, and as Andrew mentions an RCD is now required on all new sockets that might reasonably be used to feed outdoor equipment.
It is probably worth getting someone who can check these details to give the installation a once over in the not too distant future, even if you do just run a separate earth for this light.
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