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LED lighting query

The capacity between Live and Switched Live determines how much current flows when the light is OFF ... Which ever way the switches are set to OFF ( both to L1 or both to L2 ) the Live and Switched Live run side by side in the two strappers so that capacity is the same for both OFF states ... The difference in capacity between the two OFF states depends on whether the strapper closest to the returning Switched Live is connected to the Live or the Switched Live. ... When switch A is on L2 the live strapper is closer to the returning Switched Live than the other strapper which is live when switch A is on L1
That's all in relation to the 'old-fashioned' method of 2-way switching (per your diagram above). As I said, I was talking about the 'modern' method.

With the 'modern' system, with one 'off configuration' two of the conductors are connected to the L, and if one is using eric's plan of having the grey (alone on one side of the CPC) as the 'always permanent L', then that means that the other L is immediately adjacent (without intervening CPC) to the feed to the lamp ('switched live', if you wish). With the other 'off configuration', there is a CPC between the L conductor and the other two (then joined) conductors which feed the lamp ('switched live') - so, a greater physical distance between L and S/L, and an earthed CPC between them.

Kind Regards, John
 
That's all in relation to the 'old-fashioned' method of 2-way switching (per your diagram above).
It's not really. ... The switched live (in the old fashioned method) does not run in the same cable as the two strappers.
If, per bernard's diagram, one used 3C+E, then either the S/L or N travelled in the same cable as the two strappers. In the 'really old fashioned' system, there was just T+E (the two strappers) between switches (or maybe even 'T without E'!), and the lamp had to find it's own path back to N :-)

In the present context, the crucial difference between the two systems is that in the 'modern' system the 'commons' of the two switches (as well as the L1 and L2) are joined, whereas in the 'old' system they were not.

Kind Regards, John
 

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