2 way lighting help please? | Page 2 | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss 2 way lighting help please? in the Australia area at ElectriciansForums.net

D

DPrice

Im currently coming to the end of my 1st year at college (C&G 2330 Level 2). So my knowledge is some what basic/getting there.

I am reasonably confident at basic wiring and fault finding so i do now and again lend a helping hand to family.

So heres the problem - My grandad was decorating the other day and to do a proper job took off all light switches and sockets in the living room/hallway/staircase.

He then rang me a few days later and asked if id mind going over and refitting some new sockets/switches which i happily did.

However there is 1 problem - At the bottom of the stairs (in the hallway), there is a 2 gang 2 way switch, 1 side operating the hallway spotlighting, the other operating the light at the top of the stairs (which is also connected to a 1 way switch at the top of the stairs).

BUT there is only 1L and 1N from upstairs, and 1L and 1N from hallway?

And in the back of the switch i have 2 Commons, L1 L2 and another L1 L2.

Is there a way i can get both lights working simultaneously off this switch, whilst still being able to operate the upstairs light with the switch upstairs without 3 core cable? (for instance being able to have the hallway lighting on, whilst being able to turn the stairs light on at the bottom, and off when get to the top?)

If not, (which i think i'm right in saying i cant without 3 core) is there a way to make the hallway lighting permanently live and only have a single switch there for the stairs? (as the spotlights also have push button which could be used instead)

I hope this isn't too confusing.

Any help appreciated
 
Last edited by a moderator:
So just been over and wired it up this way.

All's working fine. The stairs light is on the switch, and the hallway lights permanently live (using the push buttons on the unit to power on/off)

Again thanks everyone for your help, really appreciate it..
 
If the hallway lights are permenantly live, what is the other switch for??

Something doesn't add up :confused:

Who fitted the lights? I reckon they've been wired to the loop instead of the switch live.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Yes the hallway lights are permanently live now.

The stairs lights are switched.

The lights were in the house when they moved in 15 years ago. It's just my grandad has redecorated but this time took all sockets/switches/fittings off to do a proper job.

With regards to the way it worked before I couldn't tell you as it wasn't me who took the old switch off.

As suggested earlier i've linked both commons, and put the L from hallway in with the common and the N in L1
and
L and N for stairs lighting in opposite L1 and L2!

In the back of the switch upstairs there is both L and N in L1 and L2.
 
dude thats why its permenantly fed then, you're switching a perm feed across both l1 + l2 on your downstairs light.
anyway glad you sorted it.
First thing you need to do is find out which cable is for the hallway lights (if you haven't already).

On one of the cables join the live and neutral wires together and test for continuity between live/sw. live and neutral at hallway light. If you don't get a reading try same thing on other cable.

As the hallway is only 1way the neutral wire will likely be your switch wire and should be identified with brown sleeve. You can connect that to one of the gangs in the switch. Brown to Common, Blue (with brown marker) to L1.

If the other cable is also T&E, I would think that it is probably wired as Notsosmart's diagram suggests probably using the live and neutral wires as strappers and the light getting it's neutral from elsewhere. Take a look at how the upstairs switch is wired. If you have brown and blue wires going to L1 and L2 then I would say this is the case. If so, in the downstairs switch you will need a link from the common of the hallway switch to the common of the landing switch, then brown and blue(marked brown again) into L1 and L2 of landing switch.

Something like this:

[ElectriciansForums.net] 2 way lighting help please?


Chris. I think it's been wired as per the above diagram as he has a 1 way light at the bottom of the stairs and a 2 way light at the top of the stairs but he only has 2 T&E cables coming into his 2 gang switch at the bottom of the stairs where you would normally expect to see a 3 core for the 2 way switching.

By the sounds of it, I was right about the 2 way but the switch that is supposed to be for the hallway light isn't doing much so that's why I think it's been wired to the loop live instead of the switch live at the light making it permanently live.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
if cpc used as a switch wire, it carries current, is this allowed nowadays?

had this problem, if i decide to replace the cpc with an insulated cable, do i have to open the floor to find cpc?

thought this is an easy job, if i have to open the floor, it is just a nightmare
 
Last edited:
if cpc used as a switch wire, it carries current, is this allowed nowadays?

had this problem, if i decide to replace the cpc with an insulated cable, do i have to open the floor to find cpc?

thought this is an easy job, if i have to open the floor, it is just a nightmare

No not in my book.
Anyway if you use the cpc as a switchwire what do you use as the cpc?
 
Just one note on JUD excellent diagram. It shows the same neutral feeding both lights, which in an ideal world that's what we'd all want especially on a CU change. But it's quite often in older houses that the neutral is fed from an upstairs circuit for landing light and neutral from downstairs circuit for hallway light. But both fed with the same com. For a basic 2w switch your diagram is very easy to follow for someone learning.
 
hi can i just ask,
the diagram that jud has drawn is this how you get a borrowed neutral as the upstairs light could have neutral taking from upstairs circuit and power from the downstairs circuit. as i am a bit confused to what a borrowed nuetral is?
cheers
 
A borrowed neutral is just that, it will be a neutral borrowed from a different circuit, there are houses that only have one lighting circuit, some have 2 or more, you shouldn't be taking a neutral from a different circuit, it will trip your rcd for 1 thing
 

Reply to 2 way lighting help please? in the Australia area at ElectriciansForums.net

News and Offers from Sponsors

  • Article
Join us at electronica 2024 in Munich! Since 1964, electronica has been the premier event for technology enthusiasts and industry professionals...
    • Like
Replies
0
Views
702
  • Sticky
  • Article
Good to know thanks, one can never have enough places to source parts from!
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • Article
OFFICIAL SPONSORS These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then...
Replies
0
Views
3K

Similar threads

Thanks again for your help, now solved đź‘Ť
Replies
11
Views
849
Often in old wiring, live to the downstairs switch, then in twin (or twin & earth) the two switched lives to the upstairs switch, and a single...
Replies
4
Views
406

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top