I'm having some redecoration done in my hall. One small wall has always suffered from cold/damp for various reasons, so the contractor has proposed to dry-line the wall - I've no problem with that. In that wall, down near the skirting board, is a 2-gang socket which feeds the telephone base-station and the burglar alarm (so can't be relocated elsewhere or simply removed). This socket is fixed in a 2-gang metal wall box and the ring main cables come up from under the floor through oval plastic conduit chased into the wall behind the skirting board .
The builder proposes to cut a 2-gang hole in the new plasterboard wall, put the sockets into a 2-gang drywall box, and bring the cable tails forward to connect into it. So far, so good, but... a preliminary investigation suggests that there (for whatever reason) there may be insufficient slack in the cables to reach the socket in its new position, especially as one cable comes up towards the LH end of the box and the other one towards the RH end of the box, but they will have to brought into the middle to pass thru' the hole in the drywall box. No way am I going to allow him to take up the recently-laid laminate floor to find some slack in the cable (if indeed there is any).
If the cables turn out to be just a little bit too short, then I see two options:-
1. Use WAGOs to splice short extensions pieces of 2.5mm T&E onto each cable and then connect both into the socket, or
2. Use WAGOs to join the two ring main cables together and add one extension piece only to the sockets.
The latter in effect would put the sockets on a spur, but that ought not to be a problem (except that in the future I would not be able to spur anything else of it). The former seems somewhat overkill IMHO simply to maintain the 'ring' integrity.
Have I missed any other options please? Would it be sufficient to just leave the WAGOs inside the old metal back-box or would they still need to be in their own containment?
The builder proposes to cut a 2-gang hole in the new plasterboard wall, put the sockets into a 2-gang drywall box, and bring the cable tails forward to connect into it. So far, so good, but... a preliminary investigation suggests that there (for whatever reason) there may be insufficient slack in the cables to reach the socket in its new position, especially as one cable comes up towards the LH end of the box and the other one towards the RH end of the box, but they will have to brought into the middle to pass thru' the hole in the drywall box. No way am I going to allow him to take up the recently-laid laminate floor to find some slack in the cable (if indeed there is any).
If the cables turn out to be just a little bit too short, then I see two options:-
1. Use WAGOs to splice short extensions pieces of 2.5mm T&E onto each cable and then connect both into the socket, or
2. Use WAGOs to join the two ring main cables together and add one extension piece only to the sockets.
The latter in effect would put the sockets on a spur, but that ought not to be a problem (except that in the future I would not be able to spur anything else of it). The former seems somewhat overkill IMHO simply to maintain the 'ring' integrity.
Have I missed any other options please? Would it be sufficient to just leave the WAGOs inside the old metal back-box or would they still need to be in their own containment?

