Twin 'Brown' and E

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If I was to use twin Br and E, as opposed to Br, Bl and E. Does the switch feed still need to be identified?
 
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Twin brown & E is for switch drops. it denotes that both 'wires' are live.

If you are using this for anything else then you would have to sleeve the neutral wire in blue.
 
Nope, as a twin brown is signifying that both of the conductors are being used for Live (line).
 
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As the OP couldn't be bothered to write his question out fully, I didn't see the point of writing my answer out fully ;)
 
Np t wl b fn wiot

"nope it will be fine without"

r u dd bsy at te mo?

"Are you dead busy at the moment?"

gld 2 sa i gt 10 dys sold bk in

"glad to say I got 10 days solid break in"?

they had something similar in one of the mags the other month..
10 regs with all the vowels taken out and you had to find which reg it was..
 
If you are going to abbreviate your colours. Then BASEC calls Brown - BN. Blue - BE, Green and yellow is HU. I suppose an un-insulated earth can be called E. I'll let you off with that. The ribbed core in twin brown is BNR (brown ribbed)
 
Ha ha GaryMo.:LOL: :LOL: :LOL:



Have you checked your IR tester recently??

Insert your probes in your ears, turn to 1000v and hold until you pass out :LOL: :LOL: :LOL: ;)
 

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